GreenCine Daily - ”No one familiar with the films of Catherine Breillat will be shocked to learn that her costume drama The Last Mistress, based on Jules Barbey d’Aurevilly’s 19th-century novel Une vieille maîtresse, is more of an out-of-costume drama,” writes Ryan Gilbey in the New Statesman. “What is surprising, after her insufferably woolly studies of sexual power games (Romance, Sex is Comedy, Anatomy of Hell), is that the picture is a model of precision.”
“[I]t is a little like Dangerous Liaisons, though its erotic interludes are more candid, its tragedy more heartfelt, and its dialogue more cerebral, even austere,” suggests the Guardian’s Peter Bradshaw. “It is in fact closer in style and substance to Jacques Rivette’s recent film Ne Touchez Pas la Hache… Catherine Breillat’s movies have never been much liked in this country; she is often dismissed as the sole surviving practitioner of an obsolete art-porn aesthetic. The people who want to deride her may find more ammunition in The Last Mistress, and yet it is an outstandingly intelligent, formally pleasing film, and a fascinating development for Breillat herself.”
“Swiftly and deftly immersing us in the fashions - not just the clothes and decor, but also the changing sexual and social ethics - of the 1830s, Breillat’s meticulous, eloquent script and direction succeed in relating a rich, complex, consistently engrossing story and in providing an insightful commentary on the mores and literary concerns of the time,” writes Geoff Andrew in Time Out. “[Asia] Argento has never been better, [Roxane] Mesquida and the supporting actors are strong, and Fu’ad Aït Aattou is a real find, his androgyne beauty splendidly cast, his début performance subtle and assured.”… [Full Story]












GreenCine Daily - ”Drenched in emotion and suffused with good intentions,
GreenCine Daily - ”Tom McCarthy’s surprise indie hit The Station Agent was something of a minor miracle,” writes Chris Wisniewski in indieWIRE. “A touching, big-hearted character study propelled by three vibrant performances, The Station Agent distinguished itself with its sensitivity and grace, qualities sorely lacking in an independent film culture that too often prizes the clever, the glib, the cute, and the smug. With his sophomore effort as a writer-director,
GreenCine Daily - ”Predicated on the spectacle of functionally depressed types stuck in mildly ridiculous situations not entirely of their own making, the Israeli ensemble comedy
GreenCine Daily - The Telegraph’s Tim Robey finds
Cinematical - …Like Hou’s more recent work,
GreenCine Daily - ”‘Painterly’ is an overused adjective for films, but here’s one where it makes sense,” writes Peter Bradshaw in the Guardian. “I don’t know of any filmmaker whose work gives the viewer so much incentive and indeed leisure to examine the background of a shot….
Cinematical - 


