3500+ Films - 2.5 million words – 1 million viewers! Founder and Curator Carmela selects some of our most entertaining, powerful and inspiring French films at We Are Moving Stories. These include Black Lives Matter, Paris, youth, the films of Gaëlle François, Korean journeys - and alienation.

Total length of this section: 20 films.

<BLACK LIVES MATTER>

Objectif Lune (Destination Moon) - France, 1969. In order to be adopted, twelve-year-old André is transferred by the authorities from Reunion Island to France and placed with Jean, a lonesome farmer living in the contryside. But André is not an orphan. His mother is waiting for him to come home for summer holidays, right behind the Moon. Length: 30 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Jimmy Grassiant:

Those kids were taken from their (mostly) poor families by French authorities and sent to France to be adopted. The problem was that French social services told the children’s families that their kids will come back during summer holidays and that they will go to school and have a good education, but this was a huge lie. Those kids never came back home and they were mostly adopted by French farmers and used as workers in order to repopulate metropolitan departments
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Dafa Metti (Difficult) - Under Paris’ Eiffel Tower, far from their loved ones and hounded by the police, illegal Senegalese migrants sell souvenirs of the monument to support their families back home. Length: 14.36 minutes. Director Tal Amiran:

When I researched the subject, I discovered that most of the vendors are from Senegal, living in France illegally. The contradiction between the items they were selling - trinkets of the most iconic French monument, and their illegal status in France was surreal. I wanted to learn more about the people and hear their stories. Which is why I started making the film.
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FIGHTER is not just a story about the entertainment industry and a rising pop star but about a woman’s journey to find and give love, acceptance, joy and freedom. Length: 10 minutes. Director Kelly Rozell:

I’m looking to achieve what I always try to achieve as a filmmaker, and that is to show audiences that each of us are human. We may experience things on a different level, but there is something we can all relate to. I hope that this film can connect with people who are fighting for something - a dream, a job or even a reason to keep going.

<PARIS>

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French Waves - Through a series of interviews with iconic artists from yesterday and today, Julian Starke’s documentary offers a take on French electro from the younger generation’s perspective. He tracks down the American roots of techno and house music, brings the era of illegal raves to life, and tells the extraordinary tale of French Touch, a music style that has played a pivotal role in the recognition of electronic music throughout the world. Most importantly, he showcases the newest wave of French artists, exploring how the heirs of this modern history are making it their own. Length: 86 minutes. Interview with Director Julian Starke.

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Hostage - Alex steals a car from a Parisian suburb. To his surprise, in the back seat there’s Lola, a 10 year-old Russian girl. Alex finds it difficult to get rid of Lola because she outsmarts him every time and thus the hunter becomes the pray. Length: 14 minutes. Director Laura Melange:

The film takes place in Paris a couple of months before the horrific terror attacks. This specific topic is very current and on everyone’s mind. The movie touches on what’s happening currently but is ultimately a story about friendship.
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The End of Love - Julie and Yuval live in Paris, are in love and just had a baby. When Yuval needs to return to Israel to renew his visa, they start sharing their family routine via video call. Watching each other obsessively through a screen, however, begins to take its toll on their relationship. Will their love survive the perils of this new form of “interaction”? Length: 1 hour 30 minutes. Director Keren Ben Rafael:

I made the film because I realised the broader sense of the personal story I was telling. It’s about a long-distance relationship between a couple with a baby, living in two different countries. But it says a lot about all modern couples.

I was also very attracted by the unique form of the film, told only by video calls. The challenge was to make the video calls become cinematic.
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The Golden Age - May 1967. A penniless Franco-American producer meets an ambitious French theater actress in Paris. Both desperate to change the world, they decide to embark on an artistic project together, ending up in a small village in the South of France: Saint-Tropez. Length: 1 hour 46 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer/Actor Jenna Suru:

I created The Golden Age for two main reasons: pay tribute to the World-Changing Charms of 60s Saint-Tropez, and encourage the audience to change the world on their own scale. First, it was very important to me that the audience can experience that magical 60s Douce France atmosphere through the music and 35 exceptional locations in LA, Paris and on the French Riviera: Notre-Dame Cathedral, the Bir-Hakeim Bridge near the Eiffel Tower, the Saint-Tropez harbor, Ramatuelle beaches, a period train, etc.
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Zero m2 (Zero Square Meters) - Set in Paris, ZERO M2 follows a young student coming to grips with the architectural intricacies of a rather odd apartment building. Length: 16 minutes. Writer/Director Matthieu Landour:

I lived for years in very small flats, both in Paris and then in London. I tried to make the best use of those small spaces, compressing all my stuff, placing boxes higher and higher until it reached the ceiling. Basically getting used to it. And I always wondered at which point I would go crazy about it and what I should do before I went crazy.
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May 15th in Paris - Shots of Paris on May 15, 2016 with a Parisian narrator telling us the story of May 15, 1848, when protesters finally pushed the establishment to let them have a popular vote to elect their ruler. Length: 10 minutes. Interview with Writer/Director Janek Ambros:

With Brexit, the upcoming French elections, and the rise of Donald Trump, I really wanted to make a film about how nationalism and demagogues that people elect can have extremely negative consequences, just as it did back in 1848 in France. I love films that take place in one day, so I decided to pick the anniversary of a protest that occurred in that year and shoot it on that exact date in 2016. It shows that we haven’t changed that much over time; the reality 1848, in the large scheme of things, was not long ago at all.

<YOUTH>

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Fish & Chicks - "Name two figures of the French revolution?" Erwan responds with a joke scribbled on his school desk, a stranger answers back with their own scribble, and so a game begins. With each exchange, the urge to discover the identity of the other only grows stronger! Their dialogue resonates like a promise. Length: 18 minutes. Director Elise Mc leod & Julie Grumbach:

It touches lots of people, everyone who isn’t any longer a teenager relates back to that moment of their life and has similar stories. And the teenagers who’ve seen it often say to us, yes that’s how it is for me, or my sister, or my best friend. So I think we’ve succeeded in being able to represent and talk to numerous generations and cultures.
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Lady Filmmakers Festival 2019 – Tell Him - Why can't Maxime, 9 years old, visit his mother at the hospital? Why can't his father tell him? Length: 14:39 minutes. Writer/Director Virginia Bach:

The film is a poignant journey that immerses us in a tender and tense turning point between father and son. The actors are magnificent.

<THE FILMS OF GAELLE FRANCOIS>

I am a Kiss - A gesture of the everyday life for some, is without a big meaning, but for others, constitutes a promise, a declaration. Length: 2.20 minutes. Director Gaëlle François:

I wanted to talk about cultural differences but in a funny, soft way. Every French person may have encountered a similar situation coming in Korea or Japan, for example. “I am a Kiss” talks about a very simple, current quid pro quo. It is also based on a personal memory.

Rage Room - Daesan, an ordinary office worker, realizes how much his life could make him sick. Length: 5.12 minutes. Director Gaëlle François:

By looking at my Korean friends, I realized how tough it is to work in Korea and to what extent the hierarchical system here could be difficult to live with. Indeed, this system, like a pyramid, imposes many social constraints and codifies the relations between people.

<KOREAN JOURNEYS>

Résonances - Female divers of Jeju Island, Korea, and goatherds of Pyrenees, France. Two worlds so radically opposed. They are old, their craft is disappearing. But they are alive, and somehow connected. Length: 29 minutes. Director Jean-Julien Pous:

Those persons for me stand out as wise as gods, with self-limitation and care, amidst a world of hell and chaos with no ethics whatsoever. Their lives are difficult, but they made this choice, and they come back to their work every single day. For me, they are examples of how to live a life for the greater good.

No Return - A desperate killer is sent on an impossible mission which involves his ex-North Korean girl-friend in Seoul, South-Korea. Writer/Director/Producer Antoine Coppola:

At the beginning, this short film is based on a real event. I met a man in a bar downtown Seoul (a place I use to go to think). He was very quiet and slow in his movements. I thought he was very cinematographic. We started drinking together all night. Then, he told me a secret: he was a professional killer. I could not believe it. But I always enjoyed John Woo movies about desperate killers. I told him this, and he said, “That’s nothing compared to my last mission”. “Oh!” I said, “tell me more!”

<ALIENATION>

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Friday Night follows the experiences of Claire, a mother who becomes caught up in city-wide attack while visiting her daughter, a student in France. Finding herself in a strange place and unable to speak the language, she begins a desperate night-time search to find her daughter and ensure her safety. Length: 15 minutes. Writer/Director Alexis Michalik:

It’s about these little moments when you lose sight of someone you really care for. Could be in a supermarket, a crowded event, a country at war or after a tsunami. I believe that in these moments you reveal your true nature: if you care about that person, wether it’s your kid, parent, loved one, nothing else matters that finding him/her.
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Creative Block (Bloc et Blocage) - A young artist crosses an ocean in hopes of finding her lost creativity — literally. Length: 16 minutes. Writer/Director/Producer Nicola Rose:

People really relate to the theme of creative depression. As I mentioned earlier, I think it goes way beyond the specifics of the arts. Everybody has gone through some sort of downswing the way the main character does in Creative Block. Also (and this is fascinating to me) people are really divided on whether it’s a funny film or not! I’ve seen audiences who have been terribly moved by it, and cried. I’ve seen others find it hilarious (in the best way). It really depends on the person, or the crowd, and their mood.
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White Spirit (Du Blanc à L'âme) - Gaps in conversations: everybody tries to avoid them. It is sadly White's job to interfere in conversations at appropriate – or quite inconvenient – moments in order to disturb them. Length: 25 minutes. Writer/Director Aude Thuries:

Du blanc à l’âme is the story of a man who doesn’t fit in, who can’t find his place in the world, and who’s convinced that his job is pointless. That’s kind of n universal and contemporary issue actually, and one I feel deeply connected to. It’s hard to find meaning in what we do nowadays, and I didn’t want to talk about this in a gloomy way but I felt it was something worth telling.
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Easy Reappearance - Anne, a fity-year-old woman with a bourgeois mentality, listens to a message secretly intended for her husband: a man makes an appointment with him in a gay club where you must give the password, “Easy Reappearance”... Length: 16.50 minutes. Writer/Director Guillaume Levil:

Hey, audience ! You have to see this film ! The first reason is that it’s short! Only 16 minutes. So, If you find it boring, don’t worry, it’s not a feature and it will be finished soon. The other reason is that French is a beautiful language. Don’t you think ? Don’t worry, there will be subtitles in English. An other reason : ok, the subject of the film is LIBERTY (so everybody is related to that, especially these days). BUT in the film, we speak about English people ! It’s a surprise, go, see the film, and learn about English people - I hope it will be funny.
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Juliet - Bored with the routine? Depressed by the thought of going to bed alone every night? Juliet is the first super-competent companion robot, and she´s waiting for you! Length: 12 minutes. Director Marc-Henri Boulier:

First of all, the film begins as a comedy, with a sense of irony, gradually adding some elements of drama. It is fully entertaining but not meaningless, reflecting on our society and the evolution of our relationship with technology…. and consumption!