Le Petit Prince a dit

Le Petit Prince a Dit is 1992 French-Swiss drama film written and directed by Christine Pascal. The film follows an estranged Swiss couple who re-evaluate their relationship with the discovery of their daughter's terminal illness. It premiered on 3 September 1992 at the Montreal Film Festival.

Le Petit Prince a Dit
Promotional poster
Directed byChristine Pascal
Produced byRobert Boner
Emmanuel Schlumberger
Written byRobert Boner
Christine Pascal
StarringRichard Berry
Anémone
Music byBruno Coulais
CinematographyPascal Marti
Edited byJacques Comets
Distributed byActeurs Auteurs Associés (France)
Release date
  • 25 November 1992 (1992-11-25) (France)
Running time
115 minutes
CountryFrance
Switzerland
LanguageFrench

Plot

A young girl, Violette goes to live with her grandmother after her parents, Adam and Mélanie separate. Thus she rarely gets an opportunity to see her busy parents. Her mother is concerned at her daughter's clumsiness and convinces her estranged husband to take her to see a doctor. The medical examination reveals that Violette has a brain tumour and is likely to die within a few months. Adam decides to take Violette on a road trip to Italy where her mother is rehearsing for a play. Violette disapproves of her father's new girlfriend and longs to see her parents reunited. Upon the realisation that Violette only has days left to live, Adam and Mélanie attempt to make their daughter's wish a reality.[1]

Cast

  • Richard Berry as Adam Leibovich
  • Anémone as Melanie
  • Marie Kleiber as Violette Leibovich
  • Lucie Phan as Lucie
  • Mista Préchac as Minerve
  • Claude Muret as Jean-Pierre
  • Jean Cuenoud as Otto
  • John Gutwirth as Victor

Awards and nominations

Montreal World Film Festival

  • Best Actor - Richard Berry (won)
  • Best Screenplay - Christine Pascal and Robert Boner (won)
  • Louis Delluc Prize - Christine Pascal (won)
gollark: Thing is, what I'm attempting to say is: what sort of bad things do you think people or companies could do with leaked or bought or whatever data?
gollark: Google does, if not much else, have, as far as I know, a good track record for not letting other people get their precious datas.
gollark: I was asking Solar, but yes, that's actually sensible I guess.
gollark: Anyway, what I'm saying is, outside of selling of data to other companies (which basically just spreads it more widely, which I guess you might be against in itself?), what particular bad things are you worried non-Google companies might do with your data?
gollark: Initiate orbital laser strike!

References

  1. Synopsis Films de France. Retrieved on 11 December 2010


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.