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Author Archives: Metro Council

Fast Food Women (1992)

28m; U.S.

Director: Anne Lewis Johnson

Synopsis: Close-up look at working conditions of fast-food service workers in eastern Kentucky. Affecting portraits but somewhat dated (though the issue is still current).

Contact: Anne Lewis 512-656-0507 (cell) http://www.annelewis.org

 

Fear and Trembling (2003)

107m; France

Director: Alain Corneau

Cast: Sylvie Testud, Kaori Tsuji and Tarô Suwa

Synopsis: A Belgian woman looks back on her year at a Japanese corporation in Tokyo in 1990. She is Amélie, born in Japan, living there until age 5. After college graduation, she returns with a one-year contract as an interpreter. The vice president and section leader, both men, are boors, but her immediate supervisor, Ms. Mori, is beautiful and trustworthy. Amélie’s downfall begins when she speaks perfect Japanese to clients. She compounds her failure by writing an excellent report for an enterprising colleague. The person she least expects to stab her in the back exposes her work. Thus begins her humiliations. What can become of her and of her relationship with Ms. Mori and with Japan?

 
 

Fame is the Spur (1947)

A British politician finds that his intense liberal views become more conservative with his rise to power.

Hamer Radshaw rises from a Manchester slum to an important post in the British Cabinet but, along the way, his strong socialist beliefs undergo modifications to the extent that, while maintaining them in principle, he diametrically opposes them in practice. His ‘spur’ for prosperity and social status causes him to sacrifice his ideals and friends, including allowing his wife, a fighter for women’s rights, to be jailed.Written by Les Adams <longhorn1939@suddenlink.net> on IMDB

 
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Posted by on February 21, 2012 in Politics, Women, Working Class

 

FDA: A History (2008)

82m; U.S.

Synopsis: History of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration

Contact: Compliance Media; http://www.fdahistory.com

 
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Posted by on February 21, 2012 in Documentary, Politics, Safety & Health

 

Fair Play (2006)

France-Belgium-Czech Republic

Director: Lionel Bailliu

“Variety” review by LISA NESSELSON (8/29/2006)

A TFM Distribution release of a Manuel Munz presentation of a Les Films Manuel Munz, Entre Chien et Loup, Araneo Belgium, Okko Production, M6 Films co-production with participation of TPS Star, M6, TF1 Intl. and with support from Eurimages. (International sales: TF1 Intl., Issy-les-Moulineaux, France.) Produced by Munz. Co-producers, Diana Elbaum, Sebastien Delloye, Olda Mach. Directed, written by Lionel Bailliu, based on his short film “Squash.”
With: Benoit Magimel, Marion Cotillard, Jeremie Renier, Eric Savin, Melanie Doutey, Jean-Pierre Cassel, Malcolm Conrath.

Sports-minded scripter-helmer Lionel Bailliu expands his brilliantly controlled award-winning short “Squash” (2000) into a far messier but occasionally gripping feature in “Fair Play.” Talky, cynical tale of ruthless office politics tested in the great outdoors is far more energetic than most mainstream French pics. A guilty pleasure for fans of anybody in the name cast, Sept. 6 release narrowly skirts self-parody while dishing out calculated thrills and chills. Script’s template could be adapted in any country with a term for “back-stabbing.”Bailliu’s Oscar-nommed short, in which a sadistic boss turns a squash match with a young employee into a merciless microcosm of the business world, was tightly scripted and edited. In this feature version, charismatic thesp Eric Savin reprises his role as the aggressively fit, short-fused boss who seems to think the guillotine would be too good for a sales rep who loses a contract.Pic starts with a list of the rules of sportsmanlike behavior for which the French use the English term “fair play.” All scenes include athletic activities: rowing, playing squash, jogging, playing golf, swimming. However, although not one scene transpires in an actual office, that is the sphere that conditions every action and conversation.Jean-Claude (Benoit Magimel, amusingly outfitted with a pot belly and dyed red hair) and Alex (Jeremie Renier) are co-workers at the firm run by soulless shark Charles (Savin). Jean-Claude is an ambitious bully who fishes for incriminating info on fellow workers under the guise of male camaraderie. Alex is a nice guy, feeling vulnerable about the affair he’s had with an ill-chosen married woman.Jean-Claude has some dirt on Charles’ secretary Nicole (Marion Cotillard). Meanwhile, on the golf course, Jean-Pierre Cassel steals a delectably cruel seg as Edouard, Charles’ patrician father-in-law and a powerful board member.Oddly enough, Edouard uses the same vicious tactics on Charles that Charles used on the squash court to intimidate Alex. There’s always somebody in a position to dish out humiliation all along the corporate food chain.With staff allegiances in tatters, allegations of sexual harassment on tap and jobs at risk, Charles plans a highly athletic group trip. Outing involves rock climbing, coasting down waterfalls, and swimming beneath stone underpasses in a deep canyon. Joining Charles, Jean-Claude, Alex and Nicole is can-do Beatrice (Melanie Doutey).Oozing with contempt for your fellow climbers is not the best way to set off on an expedition, especially when almost everybody in the group has at least one nemesis whose “accidental” death would be an expedient solution. Although the characters themselves aren’t particularly believable here, their underlying motivations are. Adrenalin and competitiveness fairly ooze off the screen.Ambitious pic’s physical antics aren’t always edited to make spatial sense, score is needlessly obvious and clunky dialogue mars the often-intriguing structure. But suspense builds to an unexpected finale and a sardonic coda.
Camera (color), Christophe Paturange; editors, Sylvain Dupuy, Bailliu; music, Laurent Juillet, Denis Penot; production designer, Jean-Jacques Gernolle; costume designer, Anne David; sound (Dolby), Dominique Warnier, Alek Goosse, Franco Piscopo; associate producers, Marc Jenny, Leon Perahia; assistant director, Thomas Trefouel; casting, Pierre-Jacques Benichou. Reviewed at Cercle Foch screening room, Paris, July 1, 2006. Running time: 98 MIN.


 
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Posted by on February 21, 2012 in Drama, White Collar, Working Class

 

Squash (2002)

French; 27m
directed and written by Lionel Bailliu. The film has won multiple awards at film festivals and was nominated for an Academy Award in the Live Action Short Film category in 2004. The film stars Malcolme Conrath as Alexandre and Eric Savin as Charles.

Depicts an increasingly aggressive squash game between two businessmen, Alexandre and his boss, Charles. The game is presented as a metaphor for office politics.

 

 
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Posted by on February 21, 2012 in Politics, Sports, White Collar

 

Fenceline: A Company Town Divided

Director: Slawomir Grunberg

Synopsis: Features organizing around environmental justice. “The Fenceline is about a community called “Diamond” located near a Shell chemical processing plant in Norco, LA. The community struggles to be relocated and eventually ‘wins’ their request for relocation. A google search for Margie Richards or Norco, LA or Fenceline, or Diamond Community.

 

Ferry Tales (2003)

40m; U.S.

Director: Katja Esson

Synopsis (IMDB): A documentary that focuses on the daily meetings between a group of commuters in the women’s room of the Staten Island Ferry.

 

Fight Club (1999)

139m; U.S.

Director: David Fincher

Cast: Brad Pitt, Edward Norton, Helena Bonham Carter

Synopsis (IMDB): An office employee and a soap salesman build a global organization to help vent male aggression.

 
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Posted by on February 21, 2012 in Comedy, Drama

 

Fight in the Fields: Cesar Chavez and the Farmworkers’ Struggle (1997)

118m; U.S.

Director: Rick Tejada-Flores & Raymond (Ray) Telles

Synopsis: More than two years in the making, The Fight in the Fields: Cesar Chavez and the Farmworkers’ Struggle is the first film to cover the full arc of Cesar Chávez’ life. Using archival footage, newsreel, and present-day interviews with Ethel Kennedy, former California Governor Jerry Brown, Dolores Huerta, and Chávez’ brother, sister, son and daughter, among others, the documentary traces the remarkable contributions of Chávez and others involved in this epic struggle. (http://www.pbs.org/itvs/fightfields/index.html)

Contact: The Cinema Guild Inc. 130 Madison Avenue New York, NY 10016-7038 (212) 685-6242 info@cinemaguild.com http://www.cinemaguild.com