Irène Jacob Cuts Deep
By Alex Simon
French-Swiss actress Irène Jacob cemented her status as one of her generation’s greatest talents through her work with legendary Polish director Krzysztof Kieślowski: The Double Life of Veronique (1991, for which she was awarded Best Actress at Cannes) and the final chapter of his Three Colors Trilogy, Red (1994).
Jacob comes from an accomplished family: her father Maurice was a renowned French physicist, her mother a successful psychotherapist, and her three brothers are composed of two scientists and a musician. After making her film debut in Louis Malle’s Au Revoir Les Enfants in 1987, Jacob has literally not stopped working. Her latest film, written and directed by her co-star Arnaud Viard, is Paris Love Cut, Viard’s semi-autobiographical tale of a filmmaker trying to balance his personal life, career and sanity in an increasingly shifting landscape. Jacob is delightful as Viard’s very patient (and very pregnant) fiancée.
By Alex Simon
French-Swiss actress Irène Jacob cemented her status as one of her generation’s greatest talents through her work with legendary Polish director Krzysztof Kieślowski: The Double Life of Veronique (1991, for which she was awarded Best Actress at Cannes) and the final chapter of his Three Colors Trilogy, Red (1994).
Jacob comes from an accomplished family: her father Maurice was a renowned French physicist, her mother a successful psychotherapist, and her three brothers are composed of two scientists and a musician. After making her film debut in Louis Malle’s Au Revoir Les Enfants in 1987, Jacob has literally not stopped working. Her latest film, written and directed by her co-star Arnaud Viard, is Paris Love Cut, Viard’s semi-autobiographical tale of a filmmaker trying to balance his personal life, career and sanity in an increasingly shifting landscape. Jacob is delightful as Viard’s very patient (and very pregnant) fiancée.
- 12/7/2016
- by The Hollywood Interview.com
- The Hollywood Interview
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Loose threads, speculation, and a fan's wishlist: some thoughts on where Doctor Who series 10 may take us...
This article contains spoilers for Doctor Who series 9.
Series 9 of Doctor Who (or Season 35, if you’re our favourite kind of pedant) may still be warm in the ground, but fans being fans we’re inevitably already wondering what’s next. We’ve got a festive trifle at Christmas, of course, with The Husbands Of River Song reuniting the Doctor with everyone’s second-favourite Whoniverse archaeologist, but what then? Here’s some of the possible directions we think Series 10 may take…
A New Companion
This one’s not so much speculation as fact; the Doctor will be joined by a new companion when the tenth series begins sometime next year.
Steven Moffat has been discussing how bringing a new companion in reboots the show to an extent, saying that he...
google+
Loose threads, speculation, and a fan's wishlist: some thoughts on where Doctor Who series 10 may take us...
This article contains spoilers for Doctor Who series 9.
Series 9 of Doctor Who (or Season 35, if you’re our favourite kind of pedant) may still be warm in the ground, but fans being fans we’re inevitably already wondering what’s next. We’ve got a festive trifle at Christmas, of course, with The Husbands Of River Song reuniting the Doctor with everyone’s second-favourite Whoniverse archaeologist, but what then? Here’s some of the possible directions we think Series 10 may take…
A New Companion
This one’s not so much speculation as fact; the Doctor will be joined by a new companion when the tenth series begins sometime next year.
Steven Moffat has been discussing how bringing a new companion in reboots the show to an extent, saying that he...
- 12/7/2015
- by simonbrew
- Den of Geek
ROTTERDAM, The Netherlands -- Scottish moviemaker Richard Jobson has secured £392,200 ($740,193) from the U.K. Film Council's new cinema fund for his next film, A Woman in Winter, the council announced here Thursday. Written and directed by Jobson, Winter stars British newcomer Jamie Sives (Mean Machine), French actress Julie Gayet (Clara et Moi), Jason Flemyng (The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen) and Brian Cox (The Bourne Supremacy). The script tells the story of an astronomer in Edinburgh, Scotland, who embarks on a passionate and destructive love affair with a French photographer. The movie will be shot using HD digital technology and will be produced by longtime Jobson collaborator Chris Atkins (Sixteen Years) and Tartan Films chief Hamish McAlpine. No further budget details were available.
- 1/28/2005
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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