Juliette Binoche 'Non-Fiction' (2018) Madman
Juliette Binoche 'Non-Fiction' (2018) Madman
Non-Fiction (2018) Madman

The Melbourne Cinémathèque & ACMI present

Non-Fiction

Olivier Assayas | France | 2018 | M
Film

This event has ended and tickets are no longer available.

When

Wed 30 Mar 2022

Update

Cinémathèque’s Juliette Binoche season will take place at The Capitol with ACMI Cinemas currently closed due to urgent building works. There is no box office at The Capitol, so new memberships must be purchased online or at the ACMI Tickets and Information Desk, which will remain open until 7.30pm on screening nights. We apologise for any inconvenience and look forward to welcoming Cinematheque members back to the ACMI Cinemas soon.

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Charming, chatty and witty, Olivier Assayas’ affectionate portrait of the Parisian publishing industry (and the intellectual class that occupies it) centres on two intimately intertwined couples ­– Juliette Binoche as a weary and bored TV actress and her troubled book executive husband (Guillaume Canet), and their friends, novelist Léonard and political consultant Valérie — all of whom are utterly obsessed with the changing society surrounding them. In quintessentially French style, the popularisation of social media provides endless hours of debate, while their own infidelity proves a topic less worthy of unpacking.

Format: Colour, DP
Language: French
Source: Madman
Runtime: 107 mins

Event duration

107 mins

Rating

M

Where

The Capitol
113 Swanston St, Melbourne VIC 3000

How to get there

Membership options

Mini membership
(3 consecutive weeks)
$27–$32

Annual memberships
$153–295

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Also screening on Wed 30 Mar

Program

Fearless Vulnerability: The Films of Juliette Binoche

Three Colours: Blue (1993) – Wed 23 Mar at 7pm
High Life (2018) – Wed 23 Mar at 8.50pm
Certified Copy (2010) – Wed 30 Mar at 7pm
Non-Fiction (2018)– Wed 30 Mar at 9pm
Caché (2005) – Mon 4 Apr at 7pm
Alice et Martin (1998) – Mon 4 Apr at 9.10pm

View the full program

About the program

Among the most accomplished and significant actors in contemporary French cinema (her 10 César nominations for Best Actress trailing only Isabelle Huppert and Catherine Deneuve), as well as one of the most recognisable stars of international arthouse cinema, Juliette Binoche (1964–) has, over her nearly four-decade career, become a feminine icon – romantic, tragic, glamorous, fearless, anguished. At the same time, she has sustained an extraordinary career across wildly varied genres and film styles, from the arthouse auteur cinema of Kieślowski, Haneke, Carax, Denis and Kiarostami, to crowd-pleasing prestige fare and international blockbusters. Born to parents who were both actors, Binoche decided on a career in theatre by her mid-teens and burst onto cinema screens in 1985 with a string of significant roles, including her star-making performance in André Téchiné’s Rendez-vous. One of a wave of extraordinary young French actresses to emerge at this time, she lacked the feral unpredictability of Béatrice Dalle, the raw sex appeal of Emmanuelle Béart, the wounded defiance of Sandrine Bonnaire, but her subtle, interior and often-anguished persona came to the fore in her stunning, career-defining turn in Three Colours: Blue. The first of many movies to utilise the true power of the Binoche closeup, tears slowly welling in her eyes, Kieślowski’s film came to define her screen persona. In what Ginette Vincendeau would term the eroticisation of anguish, the archetypal Binoche character suffers, neither struggling to stifle her pain nor inflict it upon us, but feeling it keenly, authentically, nonetheless. This relative performative neutrality, the ability to sit with the emotion, has appealed to such important slow-cinema auteurs as Hou, Kiarostami and Dumont. In an era where the ethics of acting itself are increasingly called into question – what it means to “play” another person – Binoche expertly negotiates the contested ground between presentation and representation. This season focuses on many of Binoche’s most significant performances following her collaboration with Kieślowski, taking in her fascinating return to working with Téchiné and her provocative and playful teaming with Claire Denis and Olivier Assayas.

View the full program

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About Melbourne Cinémathèque

Australia's longest-running film society, Melbourne Cinémathèque screens significant works of international cinema in the medium they were created, the way they would have originally screened.

Melbourne Cinémathèque is self-administered, volunteer-run, not-for-profit and membership-driven. 

Learn more | View the 2022 program

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