How do artists and writers see the world? France 24 takes you beyond the headlines to the crossroads where culture meets the news and engages with what's happening in our lives today. Monday to Friday at 5.15 pm.
Eve Jackson speaks to one of the members of the French rock group Gush. They are unlike any other and have just released their first album, 'Everybody's God.'
The Klondike Gold Rush of the late 1890s infected dreamers from all over the world with mining fever, tempting them to the uncharted wilderness of northwest Canada. In today’s show the director Thomas Arslan and actress Nina Hoss talk about 'Gold:' a film following a band of German immigrants in search of a better life.
Today the culture show is all about cinema. Clovis Casali talks to filmmaker Zal Batmanglij for the release of "the East" starring Brit Marling, Alexander Skarsgärd and Ellen Page. The movie shows an intelligence operative infiltrates an anarchist group that targets large corporations. Also on the program: Superman is back. This time his new adventures "Man of Steel" look at how Clark Kent developed into a fearless superhero.
Today the culture show takes you to some of France’s most celebrated gardens. A journey throughout the country to understand what makes the Tuileries or Claude Monet’s Giverny so special and what kind of new challenges they face. You’ll see that the work of landscape architects and gardeners is art itself. Standing the test of time, these gardens attract hundreds of thousands of visitors every year.
Stanley Kubrick's classic film is about a family facing death in an isolated hotel. Or maybe it's about the genocide of Native Americans. Or perhaps it's an indictment of the Holocaust. It all depends on who you ask. Our guest, director Rodney Ascher, has asked just about everyone. His documentary "Room 237" explores the world of "Shining" interpretations, talking to five people about their often outlandish ideas.
Twice nominated for an Oscar for the film adaptation of his play "Shadowlands" and for co-writing the script for "Gladiator," today's guest has since adapted "Les Miserables" and Mandela's "A Long Walk to Freedom" for the silver screen. William Nicholson is here with his novelist hat on - as his book "The Secret Intensity of Everyday Life" is released in France.
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