The 16th French Film Festival UK will take place from 7 - 20 March 2008 in Edinburgh, Glasgow, Aberdeen, Dundee, Inverness, Cardiff, Warwick, Birmingham, Manchester and London.  
 

THE LION CHILD / L'ENFANT LION (PG)


A family-slanted yarn about an African child who bonds from birth with a lion cub, provides a fasinating odyssey for all members of the family. Friends Oule (Mathurin Sinze) and Lena (Sophie-Veronique Toue Tagbe) are enslaved, sold to a desert prince and held in his walled palace. Via a flashback narrated by Lena, we learn of Oule's childhood in Pama village. He became inseparable from a lion, Sirga, who was born the same day as he was. As well as becoming close friends with all members of the animal kingdom, from snakes and scorpions to antelopes and bees the boy also communicateswith trees,wind and fire. The narrative comes full circle when evil horsemen descend on the village, slaughter the adults and enslave the children. Oule, who can also roar like a lion, uses his special powers to escape. Tricks include summoning a swarmof bees to heal his festering shoulder wound and an impressive desert tornado to rescue Lena. Oule demonstrates in large ways and small the benefits of his special relationship with nature

Director Patrick Grandperret

Cast Mathurin Sinze and Sophie-Veronique Toue Tagbe

1993. 90mins

Edinburgh Filmhouse
18 March 10am (school screening)

Aberdeen The Belmont
19 March 1.15pm & 6.15pm
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LET'S SAY / ON DIRAIT QUE (PG)

Rather than playing "cowboys and Indians", children aged 8-13, sons and daughters of doctors, farmers, police officers and grocers, play at their parents' jobs before the camera. The film was neither scripted nor rehearsed and the children improvise following their impulses, to present theworld as they understand and imagine it. Are they acting out stories they've experienced, heard or "seen on TV"? Do they immerse themselves in the imaginary or reproduce reality as they see it every day? Through their perception of these jobs, of their difficulties, pleasures and pain, the children offer a profound take on the adultworld. Francoise Marie crafts a real charmer following up on her short Petites histoires de riens du tout, in which sick children engage in role-playing games, Marie has the children improvise their parents' activities at work. First seen arranging pictograms representing life's necessities in order of importance, she then asks themindividually to describe their parents' jobs, and finally, with delightful painted flats, has them create sketches based on those occupations and all imaginedwith perspicacity and humour. The visuals are rich and sharp.

Director Françoise Marie

2007. 82mins

Int. sales Pyramide International

Birmingham Cineworld
9 March 1pm & 3pm & 7pm

Glasgow GFT
15 March 1.30pm

Edinburgh Filmhouse
17 March 6pm
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