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1-8 of 8
- Hafsia, a student in Art History, is going to have to remove her hijab for an oral exam. She goes to the Louvre to view the painting that she has to comment on.
- 70 years ago, in Ksour Essaf, central Tunisia, a young woman escaped from her husband's house and, for the one and only time of her life, raised up against destiny. Nowadays, in the very same place, Sabrine is about to get married.
- Nicole is pregnant.
- Being named after a fish (Brochet means pike in English) is no pleasure cruise. Anne Brochet, the unforgettable Roxane of "Cyrano de Bergerac", has always felt that bearing an animal's name makes one vulnerable. At any rate, it has always been a hard experience to be likened day after day to a sinister fish! What about the others in her case? How do they cope with their ordeal? To get an idea, Anne Brochet goes and meets Monsieur Cheval (Mr. Horse), Madame Lapin (Mrs. Rabbit), Mr. Le Renard (Mr. Fox) and their likes...
- Our story begins in a Police station, one hot summer's afternoon with the sun beating down on every living thing. A bored cop ends up giving a, not-so-young, kid a ride, accompanying his dog's last journey.
- He was the great rival and competitor of renowned studios Pathe and Gaumont. He created Paris's two mythical theaters, the Rex and the Olympia, and was one of the talking film pioneers. He's also the one who revolutionized the Arabic cinema by spreading the Egyptian films through out North Africa. Yet today, few know who Jacques Haik was, and his name has almost disappeared from cinema history. Thanks to a mysterious roll of film and some determined descendants, Jacques Haik's name is back on everyone's lips, from Tunis to Paris, from memory to history.