Virginie silla biography sample
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The films of Luc Besson: Master of spectacle 9781526141811
Table of contents :
Front matter
Contents
List of tables and figures
List of contributors
Preface
Introduction
Three French neo-baroque directors: Beineix, Besson, Carax, from Diva toLe Grand Bleu
Du côté d’Europa, via Asia: the ‘post-Hollywood’ Besson
Musical narration in the films of Luc Besson
Hearing Besson: the music of Eric Serra in the films of Luc Besson
Of suits and men in the films of Luc Besson
From rags to riches: Le Dernier combat and Le Cinquième élément
The sinking of the self: Freudian hydraulic patterns in Le Grand bleu
Imprisoned freedoms: space and identity in Subway and Nikita
Nikita: consumer culture’s killer instinct and the imperial imperative
Léon and the cloacal labyrinth
Jeanne d’Arc: high epic style and politicising camp
An unpublished interview with Luc Besson
Filmography
Select bibliography
Index
Citation preview
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Luc Besson Tests the Outer Limits With Sci-Fi Epic Valerian
by Adam Rogers | art by Ulises Farinas
07.06.17
Luc Besson’s spaceship looks weird.
Sure, it’s a spaceship, a major player in Besson’s new movie, Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets. Visit the set of any movie stuffed full of CG and everything looks a little hinky—greenscreens where there should be roofs, shiny dots instead of textures.
This, though, is a whole other thing, more like the Jean Paul Gaultier costumes in The Fifth Element, Besson’s daft 1997 sci-fi opera. Or maybe like the juxtaposition of angst and violence Besson stirred into La Femme Nikita or Lucy. It’s a strangeness that lives deep in the soul of every Besson movie. And it’s here, on this set, one of seven soundstages dedicated to Valerian at Cité du Cinéma, Besson’s studio complex outside Paris. The little shark-shaped, one-person fighter pods at the rear of the cockpit are too far apart, with too much glossy floor sp
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Lucy (2014 film)
2014 French science fiction action film
Lucy is a 2014 English-language French science fiction action film[5] written and directed by Luc Besson for his company EuropaCorp, and produced by his wife, Virginie Besson-Silla. It was shot in Taipei, Paris, and New York City. It stars Scarlett Johansson, Morgan Freeman, Choi Min-sik, and Amr Waked. Johansson portrays Lucy, a woman who gains psychokinetic abilities when a nootropic, psychedelic drug is absorbed into her bloodstream.
The film was released on 25 July 2014 and became a massive box office success,[6] grossing over $469 million worldwide, more than eleven times the budget of $40 million. It received generally positive, but also polarized, critical reviews. Although praise was given for its themes, visuals, and Johansson's performance, many critics found the plot nonsensical, especially its focus on the ten percent of the brain myth and resulting abilities.[6]