Jacques Tati was a French mime and filmmaker active between the 1930s and '70s. He began as a music hall performer before ...
“Good design is not a particular style,” says the Milanese architect and interior designer Fabrizio Casiraghi. “It could be ...
The Illusionist is a miraculous work of art that succeeds, through the magic of animation, in resurrecting the essence of legendary French mime and film auteur Jacques Tati. The film is a charming ...
One of two films on this list by Jacques Tati, Mon Oncle follows Tati’s character, Monsieur Hulot, as he connects with his nephew. Like much of Tati’s work, the film takes a comedic look at ...
Jacques Tati’s 1971 movie “Trafic” provides a creative example of dramatic irony being used for comedy. In the scene shown here, the audience knows that prankster teenagers have swapped a ...
The final movie in the Venom franchise is releasing, as well as the award-winning Conclave starring Ralph Fiennes, among other films opening across Canada. You don’t have to be religious to ...
The Vendée hosts the world’s greatest historical-theme park in the Puy du Fou; Noirmoutier is a pick among sunny summer ...
Monsieur Hulot is a character created and played by French comic Jacques Tati for a series of films in the 1950s and '60s, namely Les Vacances de Monsieur Hulot (1953), Mon Oncle (1958), Playtime ...
He was like a character in a Jacques Tati movie.” The scene captured Harris’s unique character, quirks and all. Reflecting on Harris’s earlier criticism, McKellen added a wry observation: “I supposed ...
felt like a Jacques Tati gag. They were also inspired by the novelist Donald Antrim, whose absurd, deeply insular black-comic scenarios Evan thought might be fun to apply to politicians.