News

It’s always such a refreshing chunk of Gregorian real estate, the promise of summer looming in its most ideal form, not yet curdled into the ...
It’s also a delicious pleasure to compare the current film to the earlier. Bonjour Tristesse (2025) is Quebec filmmaker ...
Bose’s intoxicating, ASMR-worthy adaptation of Françoise Sagan’s cult 1954 novel. Now, they’re basically best mates.
At the height of summer, 18-year-old Cécile (Lily McInerny) is languishing by the French seaside with her handsome father, Raymond (Claes Bang) and his ...
In her new film, “Bonjour Tristesse,” and in her writing, the director Durga Chew-Bose knows how to create an atmosphere. By Lindsay Gellman It was a Thursday night in early May, and Durga ...
In the case of Canadian writer-director Durga Chew-Bose’s confidently composed debut feature, the answer is both yes and not quite. Some backdrops and scenarios are sturdy enough to keep their ...
TORONTO - There’s a lot left unsaid between the women in “Bonjour Tristesse,” an exploration of complicated relationships in which the camera at times lingers on routine gestures in lieu of ...
Its U.S. stars heaped praise on Montreal-based writer/director Durga Chew-Bose for displaying a detailed, confident vision for her first film, based on Françoise Sagan’s 1954 novel of the same ...
director Durga Chew-Bose announces herself as one of the great contemporary image-makers. For anyone who’s fitfully torn through the pages of Chew-Bose’s 2017 essay collection, “Too Much and ...