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The Princess of France
TrailerAfter the death of his father, young Argentine auteur Victor returns to Buenos Aires to produce a radio play with five women he is involved with romantically, deliciously detailing how life begins to imitate art.Actors: Julián Larquier Tellarini, Agustina Muñoz, Alessio Rigo de Righi, María Villar, Romina Paula, Laura ParedesDirector: Matías PiñeiroCountry: EuroDuration: 67 minQuality: SDRelease: 2014IMDb: 6.00 CommentsSort By- Newest
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Actors of "The Princess of France"
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Directors of "The Princess of France"
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Creators of "The Princess of France"
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Critic Reviews of "The Princess of France"
New York TimesJune 25, 2015"The Princess of France" has an appealing lightness and modesty, but it also feels flimsy and thin, like clever scribblings in the margins of a book, fleeting insights in search of form and energy.
Hollywood ReporterJune 23, 2015What's onscreen is often more noteworthy for the particular atmosphere, mood and language rather than any particular role the characters or events might be playing in moving the overall narrative forward.
VarietyJune 23, 2015Even the most deliberately airy amusement can use more ingenious structuring and assertive personality than Pineiro is inclined to provide at this (still early) stage in his career.
indieWireJune 23, 2015For Piñero's characters, Shakespeare isn't just a creative challenge; it establishes the rules of their universe, even as their director expertly breaks them by forging a new path.
Village VoiceJune 23, 2015Victor begins and remains a cipher, leaving the movie little beyond unusual camera angles and confusing repetition.
New YorkerSeptember 29, 2014The action takes place in streets and bedrooms, studios and museums, and the actors are never word-bound; Piñeiro, a master choreographer, sets them in graceful motion and captures them in fluid, lively images.
The Film StageMarch 12, 2016While The Princess of France is a comedy, it, like the Shakespeare play foregrounded within, is ultimately a dark and bittersweet tragedy.
Reverse ShotDecember 07, 2015The happy paradox of Piñeiro's work is that for all its meticulous control, it's also modest, starting with those truncated running times and including also the pared-down size of the narratives.
Film Comment MagazineJuly 01, 2015In Piñeiro's Shakespeare films, kisses are not "stolen," as the idiom has it, so much as frantically exchanged like batons in a relay, whisked from one character to another, punctuating the film rhythmically.
The DissolveJuly 01, 2015The Princess Of France ambles from one low-key encounter to another, rarely engaging directly with the Bard, and never elevating its heart rate beyond the resting level.
ArtforumJune 26, 2015The precise attachments, romantic or otherwise, among the constellation of characters may be deliberately confusing, but the performers themselves, all part of the writer-director's regular troupe, are exceptionally vivid.
Screen InternationalJune 23, 2015True, no one is given a chance to shine or develop their part, but this goes with the territory.
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Gallery of "The Princess of France"