ARCHIVE November2025
Jodie Foster au cœur d’un Paris où rien n’est ce qu’il semble
Dans un Paris où rien n’est jamais tout à fait ce qu’il paraît, Jodie Foster incarne une psychiatre confrontée à une disparition suspecte et à une famille qui semble dissimuler la vérité. Avec “Vie privée”, Rebecca Zlotowski signe un thriller hypnotique où l’hypnose, le mysticisme et les secrets familiaux s’entremêlent. Une immersion captivante dans un cinéma français qui ose davantage, sublimée par la performance remarquable de Foster.
K-Music Festival 2025: Beyond the Boundaries of Korean Sound
The K-Music Festival 2025 showcased a thrilling vision of contemporary Korean sound through powerful performances by post-rock innovators Jambinai and visionary composer Won Il. Blending tradition, orchestral experimentation, and avant-garde imagination, these artists revealed a side of Korean music far beyond K-Pop.
Les éclats du temps : Proust en citations
Un parcours sensible et thématique dans À la recherche du temps perdu, réunissant les passages préférés de Sylviane Demichel. Couleurs, mémoire, musique, amour et illusions sociales : autant d’éclats où se révèle l’art proustien de métamorphoser le réel en profondeur intérieure.
Nigerian Modernism
“Nigerian Modernism” at Tate Modern offers a groundbreaking look at 50 years of artistic innovation, tracing Nigeria’s creative evolution from colonial rule to independence. With works from over 50 artists, alongside the return of the 1:54 Contemporary African Art Fair, this review explores a vibrant period when Nigerian artists reshaped national identity and global modernism.
Absent – Iraqi War Drama Brought Powerfully to the Stage
Absent is a poignant and sharply relevant adaptation of Betool Khedairi’s Iraqi novel, exploring life in a Baghdad apartment block after the first Gulf War. Through Dalal’s perspective, the play reveals how sanctions, conflict and fear erode trust and community, reminding us that when the elephants fight, the grass gets trampled.
How Two Spanish Women Shaped the French Monarchy
Blanche of Castile and Anne of Austria were two powerful queens who shaped French history as both consorts and regents. Blanche guided the kingdom through rebellion and war during the minority of Louis IX, strengthening royal authority and shaping the future saint-king. Four centuries later, Anne of Austria secured the throne for her son Louis XIV and, alongside Cardinal Mazarin, overcame the Fronde uprisings and set the foundations for France’s rise as a European superpower. Their lives reveal the decisive role of royal women in shaping the French monarchy.
Lee Miller: A Life Through the Lens
Tate Britain’s major retrospective of Lee Miller celebrates one of the 20th century’s most complex and brilliant photographers — a fashion model turned Surrealist muse turned fearless war correspondent. Featuring over 230 works, the exhibition traces a life lived through art, conflict, and reinvention.
Bullyache: Who Hurt You?
Bullyache’s Who Hurt You? launches the Queen Elizabeth Hall’s season with a striking, genre-defying mix of music, dance, and cinematic imagery. From Deyn’s airborne opening vocals to Barbs’ explosive piano solo, the piece rejects conventional narrative and instead offers vivid, unsettling moments that explore the artist’s need for audience approval. The result is a provocative work that stays with you.