Tuesday, October 26, 2010

[Reel Pizza] update Oct 29 - Nov 4

This morning I was delighted to read for Mrs. Brechlin's kindergarten class at Bar Harbor's Conners School as part of their Business of Reading.  We talked about how some movie ideas come from books (and some don't), and how movies can be different than the books from which they're adapted, and what movies they were looking forward to (there's a lot of hope in the five-year-old crowd for TOY STORY 4.)  We read "Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs" and a chapter from "A House at Pooh Corner", in anticipation of a new Winnie-the-Pooh movie scheduled for next year.  On Thursday, I look forward to talking about reading and (different) movies with Mrs. Galeaz's second graders.

Reel Pizza continues to show movies for your viewing pleasure.  Of this week's three film offerings, two began as books, and both are based on real life stories~

And please feel free to come by to show us your Halloween costume this weekend, ...if you dare!
Wha--ha-ha-ha-ha!

see you soon!
-Lisa

Fri Oct 29th - Thurs Nov 4th    SECRETARIAT (PG)  116min  6:00 and 8:30
Fri Oct 29th - Mon Nov 1st      WALL STREET: Money Never Sleeps  (PG-13)  136min   5:30 and 8:15
Tues Nov 2nd - Thurs Nov 4th    MAO'S LAST DANCER  (PG)  127min  5:30 and 8:00


Fri Oct 29th - Thurs Nov 4
SECRETARIAT (PG)  116min  6:00 and 8:30
Diane Lane stars as suburban housewife Penny Chereny, a novice who takes over her ailing father's stables, to her family's dismay.  With the help of a colorful veteran horse trainer (John Malkovich), her dad's stable hand (Nelsan Ellis), and his secretary (Margo Martindale) this unlikely woman, fighting an uphill battle in a man's world, fosters a precocious colt named Big Red into a winning race horse that, if it becomes the first in 25 years to win the Triple Crown, will save the farm.  Director Randall Wallace (screenwriter of Braveheart) has made an old-fashioned, feel-good, crowd-pleasing film, successfully taking a predictable story about a legend that everyone knows the ending to and imbuing it with suspense and excitement.  {Based on the Novel "Secretariat: The Making of a Champion" By William Nack.}

Fri Oct 29 - Mon Nov 1
WALL STREET: Money Never Sleeps  (PG-13)  136min   5:30 and 8:15
Director Oliver Stone (W, Nixon, JFK) returns Gordon Gekko to the screen in this sequel to his 1987 hit film.  Michael Douglas reprises his Oscar-winning role as the now disgraced corporate raider who is just emerging from a lengthy prison term.  He finds himself on the outside of a world he once dominated and is looking to repair his damaged relationship with his daughter Winnie (Carey Mulligan).  Gekko forms an alliance with her fiancé Jacob (Shia LaBeouf), but its unclear if  Jacob and Winnie can really trust the ex-financial titan, whose relentless efforts to redefine himself in a different era have unexpected consequences.
 
Tues Nov 2 - Thurs Nov 4
MAO'S LAST DANCER  (PG)  127min  5:30 and 8:00
Oscar-nominated director Bruce Beresford (Driving Miss Daisy, Tender Mercies) uses the inspirational autobiography of internationally renowned Chinese dancer (now Australian stockbroker) Li Cunxin (Chi Cao of the Birmingham Royal Ballet) to weave a moving tale about the quest for freedom and the courage it takes to live one's life.  From a poor upbringing in rural China, young Li is chosen at age 11 by Madam Mao to train in her ballet.  His extraordinary journey continues when the Houston Ballet's director (Bruce Greenwood) invites him to the US for a cultural exchange.  He sees that the Chinese propaganda against the USA is false, falls in love and chooses defection and exile rather than return to China.  This rich and rewarding film features exquisite ballet sequences and won the Audience Choice Award at this year's Maine International Film Festival.



Thursday, October 21, 2010

[Reel Pizza] update Oct 22 - 28

hi everyone

Here is our reminder of what is happening at Reel Pizza this coming week.  See you soon!

-Lisa


Fri Oct 22 - Thurs Oct 28       THE TOWN (R)  123min  6:00 and 8:30
Fri Oct 22 - Mon Oct 25 EASY A  (PG-13)  92min  5:30 and 7:45
Tues Oct 26 - Thurs Oct 28      LAST TRAIN HOME (PG)  85min  5:30 and 7:45
*SPECIAL PROGRAMMING*   Sat Oct 23      CASINO JACK AND THE UNITED STATES OF MONEY (R) *language  120min   2:00 


Friday Oct 22 - Thurs Oct 28
THE TOWN  (R)  123min  6:00 and 8:30
Ben Affleck�s second outing as director proves his initial success (with Gone Baby Gone) was no fluke.  In this smart, compelling heist drama based on the novel Prince of Thieves by Chuck Hogan, set in Boston of course, he stars as a thug who falls for the sunny bank manager (Rebecca Hall) who was briefly taken hostage while he was robbing her vault with his buddy (Jeremy Renner, The Hurt Locker).  He�s kicked alcohol, and, now in love, he wants to beat crime.  But he�s being chased by the FBI, and getting out means turning his back on his best friend, and his heritage, as his dad (Chris Cooper) taught him his trade.   And then a local crime kingpin (Pete Postlethwaite) gives them a job they can't refuse. 

Fri Oct 22 - Mon Oct 25
EASY A  (PG-13)  92min   5:30 and 7:45
Like high school satire Election, this inventive, engaging and witty comedy features smart, sharp dialogue, and like Clueless, shares an inspirational literary relationship with a classic, this time Nathaniel Hawthorne�s �The Scarlet Letter.� A talented supporting cast (Patricia Clarkson, Stanley Tucci, Lisa Kudrow, and Thomas Hayden Church) keeps right up with the winning performance of young star Emma Stone.  She plays Olive, a school nobody who is transformed to the school tramp after she fibs to her best friend about losing her virginity over the weekend, instead of the boring truth.  Her conversation is overheard by the class morality queen (Amanda Bynes) and the news spreads virally among her peers.  But instead of shying away, she embraces her new status, and uses it to help her peers gain social mobility.
 
Tues Oct 26 - Thurs Oct 28
LAST TRAIN HOME  (PG)  85min [in Mandarin with subtitles]   5:30 and 7:45
This remarkable and riveting film documents the world of the Chinese migrant worker by following a single couple who left home years ago to work in a jeans factory, leaving the care of their children (now teens) to their grandparents one thousand miles away in Sichuan Province.  These two work seven days a week to earn enough money to send their children to school, and only can come home during the Chinese New Year, when 130 million other migrants are making the same trek, the largest human migration on the planet.  Chinese-born, Canadian filmmaker Lixin Fan (Up the Yangtze) spent three years with the Zhang family and has made an extraordinary and universal portrait of parents who sacrifice for their children, only to see their children come up with their own ideas of the future.


Sat Oct 23  SPECIAL PROGRAMMING
CASINO JACK AND THE UNITED STATES OF MONEY  (R) *language  120min   2:00
sponsored by the Maine Citizens For Clean Elections, a nonpartisan coalition of groups and individuals who work in the public interest to advocate for, increase public support for, defend and improve the Maine Clean Election Act and related campaign finance law. 
When mega-lobbyist Jack Abramoff was sentenced to jail in early 2006, he was seen as the personification of corruption, along with Tom DeLay and Bob Ney. But as this entertaining and provocative documentary shows, Abramoff and the individuals associated with him were just the tip of the iceberg. Filmmaker Alex Gibney (Taxi to the Dark Side) takes the same approach to its topic that his previous documentary Enron: The Smartest Guys in The Room does, looking at the roots of the main character, and how deregulation led to the outright buying of elected officials.   The most important topic that the documentary brings up is that this is neither "a few bad apples" nor a conspiracy. This happened because the American people let it happen by neglecting to take democracy seriously. Prevention of such events in the future requires the American people to stay vigilant of their government, and of corporations.

Friday, October 15, 2010

[Reel Pizza] SCHEDULE Oct 22 - Nov 8

Dear friends,

We are nearly arrived at the end of another great year.  This new schedule takes us up to that time when we close up for a few weeks of recharge and repair.  We have thoroughly enjoyed all the events we have presented over the past 12 months: benefit programming, film festivals, late night events, senior matinees, topical discussions, filmmaker presentations, an array of artist's works gracing our lobby walls, and of course, our regular lineup of Hollywood, Foreign Language, Documentary and Independent films.  Whew!   It's almost exhausting just thinking about it.  Here's a tidbit to make you all feel old right along with me.  On our closing day, Pierce and Chloe will become TEENAGERS!  Seems like only yesterday.....

Never fear, we are already planning our reopening on Sunday Dec. 26th with some more community entertainment, screening the "good stuff" that has been released while we were dark, and the limited releases we haven't been able to book yet.  And we still have a month to go, with a schedule of wonderful films to watch before you have to make use of your friends and neighbor's DVD collections, or catch up (via your favorite rental method) with films you missed this year .  And remember that if you want to get Reel Pizza gift certificates for holiday giving while we are closed, it is no problem; please call (288-3828) and leave a message or email lisa@reelpizza.net, and we will get back to you. 

Additionally, we have teamed up with the ABBE MUSEUM to sponsor their NATIVE AMERICAN FILM SERIES, which has already started (the October film has already happened, oops).  You can learn about the November offering here and the December film here

And we still have some special programming.  On Saturday October 23 at 2pm we will be screening a film, the new Alex Gibney documentary CASINO JACK AND THE UNITED STATES OF MONEY, sponsored by the Maine Citizens For Clean Elections, a nonpartisan coalition of groups and individuals who work in the public interest to advocate for, increase public support for, defend and improve the Maine Clean Election Act and related campaign finance law.  When mega-lobbyist Jack Abramoff was sentenced to jail in early 2006, he was seen as the personification of corruption, along with Tom DeLay and Bob Ney. But as this entertaining and provocative documentary shows, Abramoff and the individuals associated with him were just the tip of the iceberg. Filmmaker Alex Gibney (Taxi to the Dark Side) takes the same approach to its topic that his previous documentary Enron: The Smartest Guys in The Room does, looking at the roots of the main character, and how deregulation led to the outright buying of elected officials.   The most important topic that the documentary brings up is that this is neither "a few bad apples" nor a conspiracy. This happened because the American people let it happen by neglecting to take democracy seriously. Prevention of such events in the future requires the American people to stay vigilant of their government, and of corporations.

And have you seen the beautiful new ART IN THE LOBBY by Dima Karabchievsky of Northeast Harbor.  His statement: "In my work, I try to combine the  power of color as structural and emotional in order to represent the world that moves me.  I'm also Influenced by the ideas expressed in French music, as well as by the French writer A. de Saint-Exupery.   My primary influences are post-impressionists, as well as German and Austrian expressionists.  I rely more on my feelings rather than on thoughts, and consider our subconscious and intuition to be more important and rich than our brain or intellect alone. I also believe that the mysterious process of creation of art is connected with a higher (divine) power.  Rationalizing this process is always limited. The artist can't really explain why he does this or that in his art.  Ideally, the artist (and consequently the viewer) is transformed in that process just like a religious person may be transformed through prayer."

See you soon
-Lisa and Chris


Here's our film schedule:

Friday Oct 22 - Thurs Oct 28
THE TOWN  (R)  123min  6:00 and 8:30
Ben Affleck's second outing as director proves his initial success (with Gone Baby Gone) was no fluke.  In this smart, compelling heist drama based on the novel Prince of Thieves by Chuck Hogan, set in Boston of course, he stars as a thug who falls for the sunny bank manager (Rebecca Hall) who was briefly taken hostage while he was robbing her vault with his buddy (Jeremy Renner, The Hurt Locker).  He's kicked alcohol, and, now in love, he wants to beat crime.  But he's being chased by the FBI, and getting out means turning his back on his best friend, and his heritage, as his dad (Chris Cooper) taught him his trade.   And then a local crime kingpin (Pete Postlethwaite) gives them a job they can't refuse. 

Fri Oct 22 - Mon Oct 25
EASY A  (PG-13)  92min   5:30 and 7:45
Like high school satire Election, this inventive, engaging and witty comedy features smart, sharp dialogue, and like Clueless, shares an inspirational literary relationship with a classic, this time Nathaniel Hawthorne's "The Scarlet Letter." A talented supporting cast (Patricia Clarkson, Stanley Tucci, Lisa Kudrow, and Thomas Hayden Church) keeps right up with the winning performance of young star Emma Stone.  She plays Olive, a school nobody who is transformed to the school tramp after she fibs to her best friend about losing her virginity over the weekend, instead of the boring truth.  Her conversation is overheard by the class morality queen (Amanda Bynes) and the news spreads virally among her peers.  But instead of shying away, she embraces her new status, and uses it to help her peers gain social mobility.
 
Tues Oct 26 - Thurs Oct 28
LAST TRAIN HOME  (PG)  85min [in Mandarin with subtitles]   5:30 and 7:45
This remarkable and riveting film documents the world of the Chinese migrant worker by following a single couple who left home years ago to work in a jeans factory, leaving the care of their children (now teens) to their grandparents one thousand miles away in Sichuan Province.  These two work seven days a week to earn enough money to send their children to school, and only can come home during the Chinese New Year, when 130 million other migrants are making the same trek, the largest human migration on the planet.  Chinese-born, Canadian filmmaker Lixin Fan (Up the Yangtze) spent three years with the Zhang family and has made an extraordinary and universal portrait of parents who sacrifice for their children, only to see their children come up with their own ideas of the future.

++++++++++++++++++

Fri Oct 29 - Mon Nov 1
WALL STREET: Money Never Sleeps  (PG-13)  136min
Director Oliver Stone (W, Nixon, JFK) returns Gordon Gekko to the screen in this sequel to his 1987 hit film.  Michael Douglas reprises his Oscar-winning role as the now disgraced corporate raider who is just emerging from a lengthy prison term.  He finds himself on the outside of a world he once dominated and is looking to repair his damaged relationship with his daughter Winnie (Carey Mulligan).  Gekko forms an alliance with her fiancé Jacob (Shia LaBeouf), but its unclear if  Jacob and Winnie can really trust the ex-financial titan, whose relentless efforts to redefine himself in a different era have unexpected consequences.
 
Tues Nov 2 - Thurs Nov 4
MAO'S LAST DANCER  (PG)  127min
Oscar-nominated director Bruce Beresford (Driving Miss Daisy, Tender Mercies) uses the inspirational story of internationally renowned Chinese dancer (now Australian stockbroker) Li Cunxin (Chi Cao of the Birmingham Royal Ballet) to weave a moving tale about the quest for freedom and the courage it takes to live one's life.  From a poor upbringing in rural China, young Li is chosen at age 11 by Madam Mao to train in her ballet.  His extraordinary journey continues when the Houston Ballet's director (Bruce Greenwood) invites him to the US for a cultural exchange.  He sees that the Chinese propaganda against the USA is false, falls in love and chooses defection and exile rather than return to China.  This rich and rewarding film features exquisite ballet sequences and won the Audience Choice Award at this year's Maine International Film Festival.

+++++++++++++++++++

Fri Nov 5 - Mon Nov 8
LEGEND OF THE GUARDIAN: The Owls of Ga'Hoole  (PG)  90min
Based on the first three books in Kathryn Lasky's beloved series, a favorite in our house, this visually sumptuous and exciting fantasy adventure, directed by Zach Snyder (300, The Watchmen), follows Soren, a young barn owl who is pushed out of his nest by his brother, captured and taken to an orphan camp deep in a forbidding canyon to be trained for a sinister army run by the evil Pure Ones.  But Soren longs to be part of the legendary Guardians of Ga'Hoole, mythic warriors featured in his father's stories who fought a great battle to keep the owl kingdoms free.  With his new friends Gylphie, Twilight and Digger, they must make a daring escape and fly across the sea to find the great tree, home to his heroes, and save their world.  This feature is preceded by a new Roadrunner cartoon!
 
and

SOUL KITCHEN  (NR)  99min  [in German and Greek with subtitles]
Zinos (co-screenwriter Adam Bousdoukos) is a disorganized and lovesick restaurant owner in suburban Hamburg with an irresponsible brother (Moritz Bleibtreu, Run Lola Run) just out of jail who needs a job -- but one that requires no work, a temperamental new chef whose opinionated ideas about cuisine are driving his regular customers away, and a beautiful girlfriend who is moving to Shanghai.  This multi-cultural, irresistibly zany, inspired and big-hearted screwball farce from Turkish-German director Fatih Akin (Across the Bridge, The Edge of Heaven), a prize-winning hit in Europe, includes delectable food scenes and a buoyant soundtrack of American soul, ethnic Greek and techno German music.  

++++++++++++++++++++++

Coming on our second screen?

THE SOCIAL NETWORK  (PG-13)  120min
Director David Fincher (Fight Club, Zodiac) teams up with screenwriter Aaron Sorkin (The West Wing) making a resonant, compelling and mesmerizing dramatization about the beginnings of the internet phenomenon known as Facebook, and the legal and personal repercussions that grew along with the business's popularity and profitability.  The story begins with geeky Harvard sophomore Mark Zuckerberg (Jesse Eisenberg, Adventureland) reeling from a date with his girlfriend where she calls him not so nice names and breaks up with him.  His revengeful reaction to this rejection leads him to create an imaginary world where anyone can have the illusion of a relationship, even someone with no social skills.  He is financially assisted by his only friend (Andrew Garfield, the "new" Spiderman) only to leave him behind for the advice of Napster's creator (Justin Timberlake) as the venture thrives. 
 
SECRETARIAT (PG)  116min
Diane Lane stars as suburban housewife Penny Chereny, a novice who takes over her ailing father's stables, to her family's dismay.  With the help of a colorful veteran horse trainer (John Malkovich), her dad's stable hand (Nelsan Ellis), and his secretary (Margo Martindale) this unlikely woman, fighting an uphill battle in a man's world, fosters a precocious colt named Big Red into a winning race horse that, if it becomes the first in 25 years to win the Triple Crown, will save the farm.  Director Randall Wallace (screenwriter of Braveheart) has made an old-fashioned, feel-good, crowd-pleasing film, successfully taking a predictable story about a legend that everyone knows the ending to and imbuing it with suspense and excitement. 

++++++++++++++++++++++++
++++++++++++++++++++++++

Thursday, October 14, 2010

[Reel Pizza] update Oct 15 - 21

Ack!  Between getting the next schedule to the printer and hosting the MDIHS Senior Class yesterday for their Social Responsibility program, this got away from me. 

We are departing the text, as it were.  This coming week's week-long movie is brand-new, not previously promoted, and looks like fun.  The films we haven't gotten to on our current schedule are all booked for the next.  I will be sending the next schedule shortly.

See you soon!
-Lisa


Here is the program at Reel Pizza for the next week. 

Fri 10/15 - Thurs 10/21 RED  (PG-13)  111min  6:00 and 8:30
Fri 10/15 - Mon 10/18   FLIPPED (PG)  90min  5:30 and 7:45
Tues 10/19 - Thurs 10/21         BEETLE QUEEN CONQUERS TOKYO  (NR)  89min  5:30 and 7:45



Fri Oct 15 - Thurs Oct 21
RED  (PG-13)  111min  6:00 and 8:30
Helen Mirren regally shoots her semi-automatic machine gun in this spirited new action comedy from director Robert Schwentke (The Time Traveler�s Wife, Flight Plan).  She is one of a group of retired top CIA agents (also including Bruce Willis, Morgan Freeman, and John Malkovich) who have been abruptly and rudely targeted for assassination because of what they know.  They undertake a cross-country mission to save themselves, staying one step ahead of their pursuers, all the way to the CIA�s secret headquarters.  Based on the DC Comics cult graphic novel, this is a charming, slightly loopy, and just plain fun spy adventure.

Fri Oct 22 - Mon Oct 18
FLIPPED (PG)  90min  5:30 and 7:45
Ever since Bryce moved to town in second grade, his independent schoolmate and neighbor across the street, Juli, has been totally smitten.  For the past six years, Bryce has done everything he can to keep her and her crazy ideas out of his world.  Now they are in eighth grade and he is, maybe, starting to see Juli with a new-found appreciation, while she�s totally pre-occupied with saving old trees in her neighborhood, and has perhaps finally lost her earlier enchantment with him.  Showing the story from the polar-opposite perspectives of both teens, as did author Wendelin Van Draanan in her 2003 young adult novel, director Rob Reiner (Stand By Me, When Harry Met Sally) brings an old-fashioned sensibility to this sweet and winning film.

Tues Oct 19 - Thurs Oct 21
BEETLE QUEEN CONQUERS TOKYO  (NR)  89min  5:30 and 7:45
Working backwards through history, this beautifully filmed and fascinating documentary explores the mystery of Japan�s rich and enriching love affair with bugs, while other cultures developed an almost universal and profound fear of insects.  Using insects like an anthropologist�s toolkit, filmmaker Jessica Oreck, a docent and animal caretaker at the American Museum of Natural History in NY, reveals a web of influences behind this captivation, from modern day where live insects can be bought in vending machines and in specialty shops for enormous sums, back to the first cricket selling businesses in the 1800�s, to the stories of the fabled first emperor who named Japan �the island of the dragonflies.�  In the quest to discover the basis of this fascination, she explores Japanese philosophies that could shift our Western perspectives on nature, beauty, life, and even the seemingly mundane realities of our day-to-day routines.

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

[Reel Pizza] update Oct 8 - 14

hi Everyone

First I want to apologize to anyone who missed CAIRO TIME on Friday night, when our print got misplaced and didn't arrive in time for our scheduled screenings.  I did send out a notice to you all on the email list that afternoon, but the mail program decided it needed "additional administrative attention" before it could be delivered (???!?) yet didn't tell me until the next day, after the film had already arrived.   Ahhhh, I love computers!

Anyhow we've all made it to Columbus Day weekend (hurrah!) and here are the films we are going to be screening for you.  See you soon!
-Lisa

Fri Oct 8        IMPROVISION     (NR)  11:00pm  LAST ONE OF THE SEASON!
Fri Oct 8 - Thurs Oct 14        GET LOW  (PG-13)  100min  5:30 and 8:00
Fri Oct 8 - Mon Oct 11  GOING THE DISTANCE (R)  97min  6:00 and 8:15
Tues Oct 12 - Thurs Oct 14      FATHER OF MY CHILDREN  (NR) [in FRENCH with subtitles]  110min  6:00 and 8:30

****************************************

The season's finale of IMPROVISION, our occasional and wacky collaboration with ImprovAcadia, is coming up on Friday Oct 8th at 11pm.  If you haven't been, this is the last time this season to find out what all the excitement is about!  We appreciate and have had a blast with the ImprovAcadia crew this summer.  Come watch them do that thing they do so well...With the sound turned off, this ever-changing group of up-and-coming comedians improvise the dialogue, music tracks and sound effects to a cheesy, grade-B movie, THAT THEY HAVE NEVER SEEN BEFORE!  Their talents make the pictures on the screen way funnier than they were ever anticipated.  It's a totally new show every time.   If you haven't seen it yet, now's definitely the time.  Don't miss out on all the fun.

GET LOW (PG-13)  100min   5:30 and 8:00
Robert Duvall, Sissy Spacek, and Bill Murray star in first time feature director (and Short Film Oscar winner) Aaron Schneiders's fictionalized account of a true Southern Gothic story set in Depression-era Tennessee.  Duvall is Felix Bush, an elderly loner who has led the life of a crotchety hermit for 40 years, decides he's going to die soon and wants to throw himself a funeral party, while he's still alive to enjoy it.  He plans to invite the townsfolk to tell all the stories he knows have been circulating about him for years.  Bill Murray plays the funeral director who sees his way out of his debts with this job, and Sissy Spacek is a widow who once, long ago, had a fling with Felix and has been trying to forget him ever since.  It's a charming and good-natured film with excellent performances all around.

Fri Oct 8 - Mon Oct 11
GOING THE DISTANCE  (R)  97min   6:00 and 8:15
Drew Barrymore shines in this first-rate, quite funny, and rather raunchy romantic comedy about a long-distance relationship.  She is grad student Erin, in New York for a summer internship at a newspaper publisher.  At a bar one night she meets Garrett (Justin Long), who works a low-level job at a record label; they hit it off and spend a bliss-filled summer together.  Unfortunately her school is in San Francisco, and he does have a job in New York, so they decide to stay together, over the phone and via texting and Skype, with an occasional visit when they can afford it.  Needless to say, his friends and her sister are not encouraging.  This debut feature from documentarian Nanette Burstein, and first time screenwriter Geoff LaTulippe is daring, natural and convincing.
 
Tues Oct 12 - Thurs Oct 14
THE FATHER OF MY CHILDREN  (NR)  [in FRENCH with subtitles]  110min   6:00 and 8:30
Inspired by a true story, this poignant Cannes Special Jury Prize-winning film from director Mia Hansen-Løve explores the complex emotions of people and how they cope with the circumstances that life has laid out.  Grégoire is a charismatic film producer who enjoys constantly juggling the many details of his independent production company.  His employees are like family.  He also is a devoted husband to Sylvia, and father to three beautiful daughters, and spends loving weekends with them at their country home.  However, it becomes apparent that he can no longer keep all the balls in the air, as his family needs him to be more a part of their lives, and the financial situation of his prestigious company is in more dire shape than obstinate Grégoire will admit; everyone pitches in to help, but then calamity strikes. 

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