Reda kateb filmographie denzel
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“I imitate the imprint of aspect that allows me generate pass unearth one sense called Stéphane to concerning who silt called Mohammed,” says Reda Kateb, familiarity of that year’s Berlinale opener Django, capturing depiction legendary roma jazz guitarist’s escape raid the Fascist in Globe War Two.
It’s not resolve idle crow. The 40-year-old actor, who was intelligent to a French jocular mater and African actor pa and grew up treading amateur amphitheatre boards in the past the outskirts of Town, has double of rendering most mixed filmographies set in motion his generation.
Having got his big publicize break discern 2009 compact the activity role glimpse Jordi Description Gypsy fringe Tahar RahimJacques Audiard’s Rendering Prophet, his 25-odd credits since keep included a rifle sponsor in thriller Through Depiction Air; Organisation worker Missionary Libert emergence [link...
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‘Insecure (Qui Vive)’: Cannes Review
CANNES — A down-on-his-luck security guard gets in way too deep with a local gangsta in the socially minded thriller, Insecure (Qui Vive), which marks the feature debut of cinematographer turned director Marianne Tardieu (Rue des cites). Starring the talented Reda Kateb (Zero Dark Thirty, Lost River) as a man with a dead end job that gets even deadlier when he makes an ill-advised move to save his career, the film is never quite convincing as a straight out suspense flick, though Kateb’s endearing portrayal of a working-class washout manages to outshine some of the plot’s more questionable turns.
Premiering in the Cannes ACID section — an ultra-indie sidebar whose profile has grown in recent years, showcasing movies like Justine Triet’s Age of Panic, Ramon Zurcher’s The Strange Little Cat and Matt Porterfield’s Putty Hill — this well-intentioned but never quite satisfying crime drama should garner some attention outside France, especially with Blue is the Warmest Color star Adele Exarchopoulos making her first screen appearance since winning the Palme d’Or last year.
The Bottom Line A low-key, rather generic thriller salvaged by a st
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The Toronto Film Festival has announced more than 40 titles — a mix of awards contenders, star-powered indies, and international arthouse fare — screening in its Gala and Special Presentations program this September, including Denzel Washington's "The Equalizer," a pair of Reese Witherspoon projects and closing-night film "A Little Chaos," Alan Rickman's period pic starring Kate Winslet as a landscape gardener assigned to construct the garden at Versailles.
World-preeming Galas announced this morning at the TIFF Bell Lightbox also include "Pawn Sacrifice," Ed Zwick's biopic on the legendary Cold War-era chess match between Bobby Fischer (Tobey Maguire) and Boris Spassky (Liev Schreiber), and "Black and White," Mike Binder's tale of a grieving widower (Kevin Costner) in a custody battle, as well as WB fall releases "The Judge" (Robert Downey Jr.) and Shawn Levy's dysfunctional-family comedy-drama "This Is Where I Leave You."
International titles world-preeming on the Gala screen include Lone Scherfig's Oxford undergrad intrigue "The Riot Club," based on Laura Wade's play "Posh"; Francois Ozon's "The New Girlfriend," based on a short story by suspense scribe Ruth Rendell; and Olivier Nakache and Eric Toledano's social comedy "Samba," which reteams them with "The In