According to the Internet, Vanessa Hudgens, Miley Cyrus, and Demi Lovato could learn a thing or two from Dylan Sprouse. The former ‘Suite Life of Zach & Cody’ star laughed off his full-frontal nude photo leak on Dec. 15, and the fans are loving it! Find out what the Internet had to say about this ‘True Hero’ below.
When a slew of Dylan Sprouse nudie pics hit the web on Dec. 15, the 21-year-old Disney alum laughed them off, tweeting ”Whoops, guess I’m not 14 and fat anymore.” Well the fans have officially spoken, and Dylan’s easy-breezy response seems to have earned the former Suite Life of Zach & Cody star a whole new contingent of admirers.
Dylan Sprouse Nude Pictures: Fans React
Well, this one is sure to cause a media uproar. We (and the fans) applaud Dylan’s reaction to his unfortunate situation, but it cannot go unnoticed that Dylan’s...
When a slew of Dylan Sprouse nudie pics hit the web on Dec. 15, the 21-year-old Disney alum laughed them off, tweeting ”Whoops, guess I’m not 14 and fat anymore.” Well the fans have officially spoken, and Dylan’s easy-breezy response seems to have earned the former Suite Life of Zach & Cody star a whole new contingent of admirers.
Dylan Sprouse Nude Pictures: Fans React
Well, this one is sure to cause a media uproar. We (and the fans) applaud Dylan’s reaction to his unfortunate situation, but it cannot go unnoticed that Dylan’s...
- 12/16/2013
- by Shaunna Murphy
- HollywoodLife
Jean-Charles Tacchella's new feature is a roundelay farce on sex, relationships and romantic attachments. Enjoyable but slight, the movie finds a groove and rides out the quirky, understated rhythms.
"People Who Love Each Other" bears some relationship to Tacchella's best-known work, "Cousin Cousine", in conveying the pause and retreat of unconventional couplings, though the new work will struggle to find an audience.
The movie features another flawless Jacqueline Bisset part embodying French bourgeois chic to its fullest expression. She plays Angie, a twice-married, 40ish career woman who has been carrying out a clandestine off-and-on relationship for some 20 years with Jean-Francois (Richard Berry), a celebrated radio storyteller. Their affair is apparently ended when Angie suddenly announces she's moving to Florida to open an antique shop.
Angie's younger daughter, Winnie (the excellent Julie Gayet), arrives from Montreal to further her career as a translator, though she finds instead a succession of unsuitable men. The most passionate and romantic, Laurent (Bruno Putzulu), a raffish bohemian intellectual, attracts her, though his open-ended views of sex and commitment don't parallel hers.
The narrative forwards five years, when Angie, broke and failed in her business ventures, returns to France and resumes her relationship with Jean-Francois (in her absence he has become cruel and cavalier with women). Tacchella's script orbits around these four, posing and underlining their tenuous connections, touching on Winnie's perpetual unhappiness and Laurent's dogged but unsuccessful pursuit of her.
"People Who Love Each Other" never quite gets under the surface to explore the emotional implications of its own subjects. While there is something lovely and unforced about its narrative symmetries, the film also is deeply frustrating in its refusal to fully consider the weight of its concerns.
Tacchella's greatest skill has always been his work with actors. Berry projects a weary romanticism; Bisset a privileged entitlement; Gayet the possibility of attachment and love; and Putzulu a quest for freedom and individuality.
PEOPLE WHO LOVE EACH OTHER
A co-production of Blue Dahlia Prods., Le Studio Canal Plus,
France 3 Cinema, JCT Prods., Artemis Prods.,
Samsa Film and Tornasol Films
Credits: Producer: Gerard Jourd'hui; Director-writer: Jean-Charles Tacchella; Director of photography: Eric Faucherre; Lighting: Dominique Chapuis; Music: Raymond Allessandrini; Production manager: Daniel Delume; Set designer: Jean-Marc Tran Tan Ba; Editor: Anna Ruiz. Cast: Jean-Francois: Richard Berry; Angie: Jacqueline Bisset;
Winnie: Julie Gayet; Laurent: Bruno Putzulu. No MPAA rating. Color/stereo. Running time -- 90 minutes.
"People Who Love Each Other" bears some relationship to Tacchella's best-known work, "Cousin Cousine", in conveying the pause and retreat of unconventional couplings, though the new work will struggle to find an audience.
The movie features another flawless Jacqueline Bisset part embodying French bourgeois chic to its fullest expression. She plays Angie, a twice-married, 40ish career woman who has been carrying out a clandestine off-and-on relationship for some 20 years with Jean-Francois (Richard Berry), a celebrated radio storyteller. Their affair is apparently ended when Angie suddenly announces she's moving to Florida to open an antique shop.
Angie's younger daughter, Winnie (the excellent Julie Gayet), arrives from Montreal to further her career as a translator, though she finds instead a succession of unsuitable men. The most passionate and romantic, Laurent (Bruno Putzulu), a raffish bohemian intellectual, attracts her, though his open-ended views of sex and commitment don't parallel hers.
The narrative forwards five years, when Angie, broke and failed in her business ventures, returns to France and resumes her relationship with Jean-Francois (in her absence he has become cruel and cavalier with women). Tacchella's script orbits around these four, posing and underlining their tenuous connections, touching on Winnie's perpetual unhappiness and Laurent's dogged but unsuccessful pursuit of her.
"People Who Love Each Other" never quite gets under the surface to explore the emotional implications of its own subjects. While there is something lovely and unforced about its narrative symmetries, the film also is deeply frustrating in its refusal to fully consider the weight of its concerns.
Tacchella's greatest skill has always been his work with actors. Berry projects a weary romanticism; Bisset a privileged entitlement; Gayet the possibility of attachment and love; and Putzulu a quest for freedom and individuality.
PEOPLE WHO LOVE EACH OTHER
A co-production of Blue Dahlia Prods., Le Studio Canal Plus,
France 3 Cinema, JCT Prods., Artemis Prods.,
Samsa Film and Tornasol Films
Credits: Producer: Gerard Jourd'hui; Director-writer: Jean-Charles Tacchella; Director of photography: Eric Faucherre; Lighting: Dominique Chapuis; Music: Raymond Allessandrini; Production manager: Daniel Delume; Set designer: Jean-Marc Tran Tan Ba; Editor: Anna Ruiz. Cast: Jean-Francois: Richard Berry; Angie: Jacqueline Bisset;
Winnie: Julie Gayet; Laurent: Bruno Putzulu. No MPAA rating. Color/stereo. Running time -- 90 minutes.
- 11/2/1999
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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