FRANTZ

Showings

Ped Mall -The Screening Room Fri, Apr 21, 2017 5:30 PM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Sat, Apr 22, 2017 11:30 AM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Sat, Apr 22, 2017 4:30 PM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Sun, Apr 23, 2017 3:00 PM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Sun, Apr 23, 2017 8:00 PM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Mon, Apr 24, 2017 5:30 PM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Tue, Apr 25, 2017 5:30 PM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Wed, Apr 26, 2017 5:30 PM
Ped Mall -Scene 1 Thu, Apr 27, 2017 3:30 PM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Thu, Apr 27, 2017 8:30 PM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Fri, Apr 28, 2017 5:30 PM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Sat, Apr 29, 2017 3:00 PM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Sun, Apr 30, 2017 12:30 PM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Sun, Apr 30, 2017 5:30 PM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Mon, May 1, 2017 5:30 PM
Ped Mall -The Screening Room Wed, May 3, 2017 5:30 PM
Series Info
Series:New Release Films
Film Info
Rating:PG-13
Runtime:114 mins.
Director:Francois Ozon
Year Released:2017
Production Country:France, Germany
Language:French and German with English subtitles

Description

Must End Thu, May 4 - Don't Miss!

"Exquisite and haunting... one of the talented director Francois Ozon's very best films." -Dennis Dermody, Paper

"Astonishingly beautiful and inquisitive. It's impossible to deny the sheer narrative sophistication." -Eric Kohn, Indiewire

Set in Germany and France in the immediate aftermath of the First World War, (1914-1918), FRANTZ recalls the mourning period that follows great national tragedies as seen through the eyes of the war’s "lost generation": Anna (21 year-old Paula Beer in a breakthrough performance), a bereft young German woman whose fiancé, Frantz, was killed during trench warfare; and Adrien (Pierre Niney, "Yves Saint Laurent"), a French veteran of the war who shows up mysteriously in her town, placing flowers on Frantz's grave. Adrien's presence is met with resistance by the small community still reeling from Germany’s defeat, yet Anna gradually gets closer to the handsome and melancholy young man, as she learns of his deep friendship with Frantz, conjured up in evocative flashbacks.

What follows is a surprising exploration of how Francois Ozon's characters' wrestle with their conflicting feelings -- survivor's guilt, anger at one's losses, the overriding desire for happiness despite everything that has come before, and the longing for sexual, romantic and familial attachments. Ozon drew his inspiration from a post-WWI play by Maurice Rostand that inspired the 1932 film adaption by Ernst Lubitsch under the title "Broken Lullaby," with stunning visual references to painter Caspar David Friedrich.