News
Returning to Françoise Sagan's novel made famous by Otto Preminger’s 1958 movie, writer-director Durga Chew-Bose makes an ...
Sagan’s scathing social portrait, managed in a quick dialogue-heavy read that shouldn’t take an adult more than an hour to ...
“Bonjour Tristesse” is set in the present day but pulls from vintage aesthetics. It “exists out of time” and taps into a ...
Filmmaker Durga Chew-Bose takes on the tale of a teenage ennui brought to unexpected life for her sharp feature debut.
Iconic actress Chloë Sevigny and rising star Lily McInerny, along with author-turned-filmmaker Durga Chew-Bose, discuss their ...
Interview: The Indie Spirit-nominated actress has made just 2 films, but both speak to her finely tuned ability to portray ...
7don MSN
But alongside their director, Sevigny and McInerny carefully remind us that fantasy and tragedy are interlinked. Chew-Bose’s ...
At the height of summer, 18-year-old Cécile (Lily McInerny) is languishing by the French seaside with her handsome father, ...
LA Times on MSN2d
Youth, summer, beach. The costumes tell a story in Durga Chew-Bose's "Bonjour Tristesse"One of the things that struck me while watching “Bonjour Tristesse,” written and directed by the celebrated author Durga Chew-Bose, was a feeling of being — and I don't know how else to put it — ...
It’s a modernized adaptation of French writer Françoise Sagan’s 1954 novel, which was previously brought to the screen by Otto Preminger in 1958. For two of the cast members — Lily McInerny ...
When “Bonjour Tristesse” premiered at TIFF last September, director Durga Chew-Bose described the indie film’s Toronto producers Katie Bird Nolan and Lindsay Tapscott as “very persistent.” ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results