Gaël Morel & Stéphane Rideau in Wild Reeds {1994}
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Are you ashamed or what?
Come Undone (Presque rien), Sébastien Lifshitz (2000)
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Es ist so eine François-liebt-Serge-Serge-liebt-Maïté-Maïté-liebt-François. Und Henri.-Geschichte. Und dann sind sie auch noch uneinig über Politik (es spielt zur Zeit des Algerienkriegs), den Wert von Gefühlen, ihre Sexualität und den Sinn des Lebens. Sie haben es nicht leicht, die jungen Leute, aber sie geben sich Mühe, und es ist wohltuend undramatisch.
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Gaël Morel & Stéphane Rideau | Les roseaux sauvages - Réal. André Téchiné 1994
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Stéphane Rideau and Dimitri Durdaine in Our Paradise (2011)
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Title: Les Roseaux Sauvages (1994)
a.k.a: WILD REEDS
Dir: André Téchiné
Cast: Élodie Bouchez, Gaël Morel, Stéphane Rideau, Frédéric Gorky.
Teens—Maïte (Bouchez) & François (Morel) are good friends living in a sleepy village in 1962, Southern France, just as the Algerian war is ending.
François becomes aware that he’s developed feelings for his gorgeous, schoolmate, Serge (Rideau) who is more interested in Maïte—who has no interest in Serge—preferring to lock political/intellectual horns with their other friend, Henri (Gorny).
Their friendship is soon frothed with tension of all sorts, especially for the smitten François.
{ Stéphane Rideau—who forged his career, playing gay, performs well, in this film }
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COME UNDONE (2000)
Directed By: Sébastien Lifshitz
Written By: Stéphane Bouquet & Sébastien Lifshitz
JÉRÉMIE ELKAÏM (as Matthieu)
&
STÉPHANE RIDEAU (as Cédric)
Synopsis: A story of love. Two young French boys start a passionate sexual relationship that boils over and threatens to destroy both of their lives. Shy Matthieu is 18 years old, on summer vacation in the south of France. While on the beach he sees gorgeous Cedric checking him out. They meet and fall in love.
Short Review: Two heterosexual actors bringing this story to audiences beautifully. Not a perfect relationship in fact it doesn't make it to the end of the movie. Challenges arise and feelings change. Or perhaps not change but shift due to outside sources (Matthieu's high maintenance family. And Cédric's hotheadedness. Regardless this film depicts in quite graphic detail a sexual relationship. Nudity (full frontal) is here yet many of these scenes are dark. But viewable. All in all a pretty good film.
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Stéphane Thidet Challenges Physics and Social Norms in His Site-Specific Installations | Colossal
APRIL 26, 2024 GRACE EBERT
“Rideau” (2020), in situ installation at Théâtre Graslin, Nantes, France, water, pumps, pond installation in situ. Photo © Martin Argyroglo, courtesy of the artist and Galerie Aline Vidal.
Paris-based artist Stéphane Thidet invites viewers into wondrous worlds that skew perceptions and distort the laws of physics.
Paris-based artist Stéphane Thidet invites viewers into…
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Trocbuy: TERRAIN CONSTRUCTIBLE VIABILISÉ 871 m2
Stéphane GODARD de 3%.COM Immobilier, vous propose ce beau Terrain constructible viabilisé de 871 m2 en deuxième rideau, en centre ville de Saint-Jean-de-Linières. . Idéalement situé pour un accès rap...
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h a p p y b i r t h d a y
Stéphane Rideau
25 July 1976
🎈🎈🎈
[pic: rideau as david, sitcom, 1998]
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Élodie Bouchez and Gaël Morel in Wild Reeds (André Téchiné, 1994)
Cast: Gaël Morel, Élodie Bouchez, Stéphane Rideau, Frédéric Gorny, Michèle Moretti, Eric Kreikenmayer. Screenplay: Olivier Massart, Gilles Taurand, André Téchiné. Cinematography: Jeanne Lapoirie.
François (Gaël Morel), a student at a boarding school in France in 1962, is beginning to come to terms with his sexuality. His only real confidante is Maïté Alvarez (Élodie Bouchez), whose mother is François's French teacher, but he's strongly attracted to Serge (Stéphane Rideau), an Italian immigrant whom François helps with his assignments. One night, Serge welcomes François to his bed and, out of curiosity, has sex with him, though he later tells François that he's really attracted to Maïté. Serge's bother, Pierre (Eric Kreikenmayer), is serving in the army in Algeria, where the war is coming to an end, but not the bloodiness, as the right-wing OAS, a group resisting Algerian independence, is still committing terrorist acts. The film opens with Pierre's wedding, at which he pleads with Mme. Alvarez (Eric Kreikenmayer), a member of the Communist Party and a strong supporter of independence, to help him desert from the army. She tells him she's unable to do anything to help him, and when he is killed in Algeria she suffers a mental breakdown. Meanwhile, a new student, Henri (Frédéric Gorny), from a family that supports the OAS, comes to the school, and although he's violently opposed to the political position that she shares with her mother, he, too, falls in love with Maïté. The volatility of this mix is obvious, as each of the four young people has to sort out his or her relationship -- political and/or sexual -- with the others. The film is at its best in portraying François's sexual confusion, particularly in a scene in which he approaches an older man he has been told is gay and asks for advice and help. The man is, understandably, confused and not very helpful.
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