Genre Movie :Drama
Mpaa Rating : Unrated Release Date : May 3, 2013 Limited Actors :Lola Creton,Dolores Chaplin,Victoria Ley,India Menuez,Clement Metayer
On behalf of Sundance Selects, you and a guest are invited to a screening of SOMETHING IN THE AIR, the newest film by French filmmaker Olivier Assayas. Following his critical triumphs, SUMMER HOURS and CARLOS, Assayas' semi-autobiographical new feature is a vibrant, incisively crafted story of a young man's artistic awakening in the politically turbulent French student movement of the early '70s. In a nod to his earlier film COLD WATER, Assayas' surrogate Gilles (newcomer Clement Metayer) is a graduating high school student in Paris deeply involved in the counterculture of the time. While Gilles begins to realize that his interests lie more in the revolutions in music and art, he finds himself pulled into ever more dangerous political protests by the people around him, especially his radicalized girlfriend (Lola Créton of GOODBYE FIRST LOVE). Illuminating and elegiac, Assayas' story celebrates that thrilling, evanescent moment in history when young people could feel revolution just within their grasp.
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Review For Something in the Air
The whole film, though it kicks off with a riot and a firebombing, soon acquires a listless and guttering air ...Anthony Lane-New Yorker
Assayas doesn't bring out the fiery best in this material, but he's smart enough to know that revolutionaries like their comforts as much as the ruling class does.
Peter Rainer-Christian Science Monitor
In creating a mashup of a Paris rocked by political storms and a young man in just as much turmoil, the director has given us a glimpse of an imperfect moment and an imperfect life in a slightly imperfect but wonderful film.
Betsy Sharkey-Los Angeles Times
It does capture the high emotionalism of a very specific point in a person's life, where the magnitude of the injustices around you is surpassed only by the firm belief that you and your friends alone know an easy way to end them.
Stephen Whitty-Newark Star-Ledger
[It] has the aroma of an autobiographical confession by someone for whom life hasn't been overly difficult.
Kyle Smith-New York Post
Mr. Assayas's method is observant and immersive. His camera moves among young bodies like an invisible friend, and his somewhat messy narrative is propelled by fidelity to feeling rather than by the machinery of plot.
A.O. Scott-New York Times
Assayas has gathered a large, mostly inexperienced cast to create a mural of mood, a time when idealism was paramount, at least until the members of a political group begin to drift into their own destinies.
Laura Clifford-Reeling Reviews
It looks great, it sounds great...it'll inspire a hundred magazine photo-shoots, and it's got plenty of substance.
Oliver Lyttelton-The Playlist
Emotionally resonating. Assayas has a keen eye for period detail and atmosphere.
Avi Offer-NYC Movie Guru
Befitting a movie that's deeply autobiographical, Something in the Air has the vivid details of someone's memories, but it also has the shapelessness too.
Jack Rodgers-TV Guide's Movie Guide
Ought to interest anyone who has a soft spot for 60s/70s radicals, the French, rock n' roll, sex, long hair, dancing, painting, Pompeii and saying ridiculous things like "shouldn't revolutionary cinema employ revolutionary syntax?"
Jordan Hoffman-Badass Digest
Filmmakers turn out routine coming-of-age stories in their sleep. Something in the Air is made with such precision, clarity and sweep that it redefines the genre.
Daniel Eagan-Film Journal International
The film often plays like a nostalgic doodle, gliding aimlessly from one classic-rock-scored encounter to another. But then, that meandering quality is part of the appeal ...
A.A. Dowd-AV Club
Movie Image New Something in the Air
TagLine Something in the Air The question is not whether we will die, but how we will live.
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