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Wednesday, November 12 2025
The Marching Band France 2024 Location: SilverCity Showtimes: 6:30 & 8:30 pm Director: Emmanuel Courcol Cast: Benjamin Lavernhe, Pierre Lottin, Sarah Suco, Jacques Bonnaffé, Clémence Massart-Weit, Anne Loiret Running Time: 103 minutes Language: French with English subtitles San Sebastian International Film Festival: City of Donostia Audience Award, Emmanuel Courcol: 8 other César Awards, France “Warm and sure-footed, the film has the feel of a richly satisfying meal in an excellent neighbourhood bistro. Old world pleasures of character and story are generously apportioned.”---Danny Leigh, Financial Times Emmanuel Courcol presents a heartwarming French-language comedy-drama brought to life by two charismatic lead performances and a familiar yet rewarding storyline. “The Marching Band” recalls “Brassed Off,” “The Full Monty” and “Billy Elliot” movies from the heartland which dared to dream that show business or cultural community adventures can somehow survive the realities of a changing industrial capitalism. Thibaut (Benjamin Lavernhe) is a distinguished and sensitive orchestra conductor who collapses mid-rehearsal in Paris. He is told he has leukemia and needs a bone marrow transplant donor. Thibaut is adopted. Tracking down his biological brother leads him down an unlikely trail to the boondocks where he finds factory worker Jimmy (Pierre Lottin) who also plays trombone in the factory’s boisterous band. He also has a love of jazz on vinyl. Thibaut has the tricky task of asking a total stranger to donate his bone marrow. The pair couldn’t be more different – class, lifestyle, and worldview divide them – but they recognize a commonality that surpasses these gaps: a shared love of music. Thibault sees in Jimmy a vision of what his own life could have been without his adoptive mother’s comfortable middle-class background. He comes to view Jimmy and himself through the lens of class, politics and society, not the supposed destiny of pure talent. Jimmy’s band suddenly needs of a conductor. Who’s most qualified to lead them? Thibault has to forego his polished classical world to take the reins of Jimmy’s rowdy band. The chemistry between Thibautl and Lottin makes for a touching final concert encore. Wednesday, October 22 2025
Meet the Barbarians France 2024 Location: SilverCity Showtimes: 6:30 & 8:30 pm Director: Julie Delpy Cast: Julie Delpy, Sandrine Kiberlain, Laurent Lafitte, Ziad Bakri Jean-Charles Clichet Running Time: 101 minutes Language: French with English subtitles Miami Film Festival: Nominee—Knight Marimbas Award, Julie Delpy “Delpy, whose directing career has swung between darker dramas and punchy comedies of manners, ably braids those two tones together here. Added bonus: a dash of some delightful mockumentary hi-jinks.—Kate Erbland, Indiewire A small town in France preparing to welcome a Ukrainian refugee family is surprised when a Syrian family shows up instead in Julie Delpy’s touching comedy about integration. From her art house origins acting in films by Jean-Luc Godard and Krzysztof Kieślowski to Richard Linklater’s “Before” trilogy to her own films as a director, one quality defines Julie Delpy’s work: truth. Whether delivered in light comedy or devastating drama, Delpy’s work serves up the uncomfortable and the undeniable in a single coup de grâce. In “Meet the Barbarians,” it’s a frequently hilarious pleasure to watch her cast that truthful gaze on small town France. Paimpont sits nestled in Brittany, content with its centuries-old heritage, its crêpes, and its flattering self-image. The town council is delighted they’ll soon be welcoming refugees from Ukraine. But it turns out that too many in France have already taken in Ukrainian refugees, so the van that pulls into Paimpont one day delivers a refugee family from Syria instead. Awkward. As the extended Fayad family finds its footing in a village very much set in its ways, both townspeople and newcomers must rethink their preconceptions. Will the local businessman (Laurent Lafitte) hold onto his xenophobic views? Can the Fayads bridge the gulf between their lives in war-torn Syria and their current disappointments in Paimpont? Will the town’s crusading progressive (Delpy) herself descend into petty barbarism? “Meet the Barbarians” strikes just the right balance of humour, ideas, and heart. Powered by sharp writing and deft performances — Rita Hayek and Sandrine Kiberlain are standouts— this is a classic comedy of integration. |
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