French-Canadian director Jean-Marc Vallée uses music to connect seemingly unrelated characters separated by several decades on two continents. By THR Staff Cafe du Flore Film Still - H 2011 Indeed, ...
t Living in the moment, and living in the past, each life interconnected by music, are major themes in the beautiful philosophical dramatic and existential romance, Café de Flore. (This subject matter ...
Of all the films I saw at TIFF in September none had a more electrifying impact on me than Café de Flore. The film’s ending, which I could not begin to divulge, hit me like a hammer to the chest. I ...
In Jean-Marc Vallée’s time-shifting question mark of a movie “Café De Flore,” love is a force by turns organic, therapeutic, alienating and enough of a connective tissue to bind two seemingly ...
This loose-limbed, emotionally complex work should see some Euro arthouse action as well as a respectable post-Toronto local bow. Pic opens in present-day Montreal, where handsome Antoine (Kevin ...
Even writer-director Jean-Marc Vallee remains at a loss to convey with words what he is driving at here. Nevertheless, there is something captivating about Cafe de Flore that cannot be denied.
In present-day Montreal, the handsome Antoine seems to "radiate happiness from every pore." No wonder. In the prime of his life, he has an enviable career as a globe-trotting DJ; owns a palatial home ...
The arty “Café de Flore,” with Vanessa Paradis and Marin Gerrier, starts strong but droops under its overdone plot. Vanessa Paradis excels as a devoted mother determined to help her Down syndrome ...
Café de Flore is a multi-layered mystery about intertwined lovers separated by space and time. In modern Montreal, it begins with story about a husband, his new wife and the affairs of the heart. In ...