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The Trump administration is proposing tariffs on up to $2.4 billion worth of French imports — including Roquefort cheese, handbags, lipstick and sparkling wine — in retaliation for France’s tax on American tech giants like Google, Amazon and Facebook.

The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative charged Monday that France’s new digital services tax discriminates against U.S. companies. The trade office will accept public comments on the tariffs, which could hit 100%, through Jan. 6 and hold a hearing on Jan. 7.

The French tax is designed to prevent tech companies from dodging taxes by putting headquarters in low-tax European Union countries. It imposes a 3% annual levy on French revenues of digital companies with yearly global sales worth more than $830 million and French revenue exceeding $27 million.

The U.S. also criticized the French tax for targeting companies’ revenue, not their profits, and for being retroactive.

The decision to pursue tariffs “sends a clear signal that the United States will take action against digital tax regimes that discriminate or otherwise impose undue burdens on U.S. companies,” U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer said.

His agency investigated the French tax under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 — the same provision the Trump administration used last year to probe China’s technology policies, leading to tariffs on more than $360 billion worth of Chinese imports in the biggest trade war since the 1930s.

Lighthizer warned that the U.S. is also exploring whether to pursue Section 301 investigations into digital taxes introduced by Austria, Italy and Turkey.

The decision to target France got bipartisan endorsement from Iowa Republican Sen. Charles E. Grassley and Oregon Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden. In a joint statement, they assailed the French digital tax as “unreasonable, protectionist and discriminatory.”

The tech trade group ITI said it welcomed the administration’s decision and urged continued negotiations on international taxes under the auspices of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

The tariff announcement is likely to increase tension between the United States and Europe. The U.S. is already readying tariffs on $7.5 billion in EU imports over illegal subsidies for the European aircraft giant Airbus. The World Trade Organization on Monday gave the U.S. a greenlight to impose those levies, ruling that the EU had not complied with an order to end the subsidies.

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And in another reminder that Washington’s trade conflicts extend well beyond a 16-month standoff with China, President Trump on Monday pledged to slap tariffs on steel and aluminum from Brazil and Argentina.

Both South American nations were among a group of U.S. allies that Trump exempted from steel and aluminum tariffs in March 2018. The American president’s threat to reverse that decision and impose the metals tariffs is the latest example of his mercurial approach to trade policy.

Trump accused the countries of manipulating their currencies lower to make their exports less expensive in world markets and gain an unfair trade advantage.

But the countries’ weak currencies reflect their weak economies. Brazil is contending with double-digit unemployment and economic stagnation after two years of deep recession. Argentina is battling an economic crisis marked by runaway inflation, huge debts and widespread poverty.


The U.N. weather agency says that the current decade is likely to set a new 10-year temperature record, adding further evidence that the world is getting hotter.

The World Meteorological Organization said Tuesday that preliminary temperature data show the years from 2015 to 2019 and from 2010 to 2019 “are, respectively, almost certain to be the warmest five-year period and decade on record.”

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In a report released on the sidelines of this year’s U.N. climate change conference in Madrid, the agency said this continues the trend that “since the 1980s, each successive decade has been warmer than the last.”

While full-year temperature measurements won’t be available for several more months, the agency also said that 2019 is expected to be the second or third warmest year on record.


Newsletter: From ‘witch hunt’ to guilty plea

December 3, 2019 | News | No Comments

Here are the stories you shouldn’t miss today:

TOP STORIES

From ‘Witch Hunt’ to Guilty Plea

For years, he called it “fake news,” “a witch hunt” and a product of the “deep state.” This morning, Rep. Duncan Hunter is scheduled to appear in federal court to plead guilty in a sweeping campaign finance investigation.

Hunter, a Republican who represents parts of San Diego and Riverside counties, told a TV station that he would plead guilty to one of the 60 criminal charges against him and suggested that he is likely to spend time in custody.

Though Hunter did not explicitly say he would be stepping down — often an outcome in any such plea agreement — he said, “I’m confident that the transition will be a good one” and stated, “I think it’s important to keep the seat a Republican seat.”

Biden Versus Buttigieg

Ahead of the Iowa caucuses, former Vice President Joe Biden and South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg are competing for similar voters: the kind of Democrats who favor political and economic change, but not as drastic a change as proposed by Sens. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Bernie Sanders of Vermont. But if their politics are similar, Biden and Buttigieg are 40 years apart in age and come in very different packages. Here’s how the race is playing out in the Hawkeye State.

More Politics

— The House is moving forward in a landmark impeachment week, with Democrats who once hoped to sway Republicans now facing the prospect of an ever-hardening partisan split over the question of removing President Trump from office. Today, the House Intelligence Committee is expected to release its report.

— Deputy Energy Secretary Dan Brouillette, Trump’s pick to succeed Rick Perry as Energy secretary, has won easy Senate confirmation, despite a Democratic senator’s objections that the nominee hadn’t fully answered questions related to the Trump impeachment investigation.

— Former Deputy Atty. Gen. Rod Rosenstein told the FBI that he was “angry, ashamed, horrified and embarrassed” at the way James B. Comey was fired as FBI director, according to records released Monday.

— The Trump campaign has banned Bloomberg News from its rallies and other events. Now that Michael R. Bloomberg is running for the Democratic nomination, the news organization — which has long had an unusual policy of not covering its majority owner — plans not to investigate him or his primary rivals.

A New Tool in the LAPD’s Kit

It sounds like a gun, but instead of deadly bullets, it fires a Kevlar cord that entangles around an individual’s body to restrict mobility. Though it sounds like something that might be found on Batman’s utility belt, the BolaWrap 100 will soon be in the hands of several hundred Los Angeles police officers for a 90-day test. The goal is to help them detain individuals without using lethal force. But not everyone is happy with the idea.

A Football Player’s Legacy

Kevin Ellison was a hard-hitting defensive back, team captain and fan favorite at USC. He went on to play one season for the San Diego Chargers. The three words tattooed on the football player’s left arm summed up his approach to life: “Be the best.” After he died at age 31 last year, his family donated his brain to be studied for CTE, or chronic traumatic encephalopathy. Today’s Column One feature looks at the life of Ellison and the final journey of K-0623, as his brain became known to researchers.

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FROM THE ARCHIVES

On this date in 1945, a few months after the end of World War II, the Caltech Optical Shop resumed grinding work on the mirror of a 200-inch Palomar Observatory telescope. The work had been halted in 1942, when engineers, scientists and Caltech laboratories were assigned war-related work.

“As the Big Eye revolved again on the grinding table, Dr. John A. Anderson, who has directly supervised work on the Palomar Observatory project since 1928, and Marcus H. Brown, chief optician and head of the optical shop, were all smiles,” The Times reported the next day.

The mirror would finally make its way to the observatory in 1947.

CALIFORNIA

— Peter Lynn is stepping down as head of the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority after five years as the face of bad news on the homelessness crisis.

— David Geffen has donated another $46 million to the UCLA medical school already named for him to fund more scholarships, giving more than 400 future doctors a free education.

— Southern California is about to get more rain. Blame the atmospheric river.

— Coastal fog may be carrying toxic levels of methylmercury, which is then dumped on the land, makes its way up the food chain and contaminates mountain lions living in the region, UC Santa Cruz researchers found.

— The federal government sued the city of Hesperia and the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department, accusing them of illegally targeting black and Latino tenants for evictions.

HOLLYWOOD AND THE ARTS

Anna Paquin barely speaks in “The Irishman.” Robert De Niro is OK with that.

— Here’s what’s going on with Gabrielle Union, “America’s Got Talent” and reports NBC fired her in retaliation for reporting a toxic and racist backstage culture.

— “Queer Eye” star Jonathan Van Ness just made history with a Cosmopolitan U.K. cover.

— With every viewing, “Frozen 2″ keeps getting more adult and more political.

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— Longtime Grammy producer Ken Ehrlich reflects on 40 years of chaos, flubs and impromptu immortality ahead of his swan song.

NATION-WORLD

— Amnesty International says at least 208 people in Iran have been killed amid protests over sharply rising gasoline prices and a subsequent crackdown by security forces.

—Can an American’s comments about cryptocurrency violate his country’s sanctions against North Korea? That question is at the heart of a criminal case against Virgil Griffith, a rabble-rousing computer scientist.

— Trump has heaped praise on Boris Johnson. But the British prime minister would rather he not — at least until after the Dec. 12 parliamentary election. Is his effort to distance himself too little too late?

— A decade after Poland and dozens of other nations committed to the return of private property stolen from Jews by the Nazis or nationalized by the communist government, the country’s ascendant far right is pushing for a bill that would not just ban restitution but criminalize it.

— Bad news for globe-trotting troublemakers: Starting Jan. 1, it will be easier to prosecute passengers who get unruly on international flights.

BUSINESS

— California’s monopoly electric utilities asked state officials to sign off on higher profits earlier this year. Now, regulators are poised to reject those pleas.

— With Cyber Monday consumer spending on track for a record, critics of Amazon — including labor, environmental and digital privacy groups — staged protests around the globe, including at a San Bernardino shipping hub and Jeff Bezos’ Manhattan penthouse.

Riot Games will pay at least $10 million to women who worked there in the last five years to settle a gender discrimination lawsuit.

— A Los Angeles jury has found billionaire and hologram entrepreneur Alki David liable for sexual battery and sexual harassment against a former employee and ordered him to pay $50 million in punitive damages. It’s among the biggest awards ever for an employment case.

SPORTS

— Lionel Messi received his record sixth Ballon d’Or, and Megan Rapinoe won her first.

— The Chargers’ playoff outlook looks grim, but quarterback Philip Rivers says the team will be “fighting like crazy.”

— Coming off Sunday’s loss, tonight the Lakers will face just as tough a test against the Nuggets.

OPINION

— Trump is right that our national parks are in crisis, but his plan to fix it by commercializing campgrounds is absurd, write two professors who co-wrote a book on U.S. national parks.

— Why China won’t let Hong Kong become another Tiananmen Square.

WHAT OUR EDITORS ARE READING

— Match Group, which owns most major online dating services, screens for sexual predators on Match — but not on Tinder, OkCupid or PlentyofFish. (ProPublica)

— Who broke the color barrier for modern professional basketball? Wataru “Wat” Misaka, a 5-foot-7 Japanese American player in the Basketball Association of America, or BAA, the precursor to the NBA. He died last month at 95. (The Undefeated)

— The Apostrophe Protection Society, dedicated to preserving the correct use of the punctuation mark, has shut down because “ignorance has won.” (Evening Standard)

ONLY IN CALIFORNIA

Look magazine called it the “House of Tomorrow.” Elvis and Priscilla Presley called it their honeymoon retreat in 1967. Today, someone could call this Palm Springs Midcentury Modern house their home, as it’s back on the market. This time, the asking price is $3.2 million; it has dropped roughly a dozen times since the property first came on the market for $9.5 million in 2014. But you can take a look inside for a song.

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NEW YORK — 

A wintry storm that made Thanksgiving travel miserable across much of the country gripped the East with a messy mixture of rain, snow, sleet and wind, slowing the Monday morning commute, closing schools and offices, and snarling air travel.

Forecasters said the nor’easter could drop 10 to 20 inches of snow by Tuesday morning from Pennsylvania to Maine. Heavy snow was possible in the Appalachian Mountains down to Tennessee and North Carolina.

“We’ve got our shovels ready. We’ve got the snowblower ready. We’re prepared,” said Paul Newman, of Wethersfield, Conn.

Schools closed preemptively as rain was expected to turn into snow in the region’s first significant storm of the season, a nor’easter so named because the winds typically come from the northeast.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo advised nonessential state employees to stay home Monday, and New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy declared government offices for nonessential employees would close at noon.

More than 180 flights into or out of the U.S. were canceled Monday morning, with more than 450 delays. Airports in the New York and Boston areas accounted for many of them.

Tractor-trailers were banned or lower speed limits put in place on stretches of interstate highways in New Jersey and Pennsylvania.

Inland areas appeared to be in for the worst of it, with the forecast in Albany, N.Y., predicting 6 to 14 inches.

Only 3 inches of snow was expected in New York City. Up to 9 inches, though, was possible in Boston by Tuesday night. As much as 5 inches was forecast for Philadelphia.

The trouble began in the East on Sunday as the storm moved out of the Midwest.

State police had responded to more than 550 storm-related crashes across New York by 7 p.m. Icy roads caused crashes on Interstate 84 in Pennsylvania, and ice closed part of Interstate 81 near Binghamton, N.Y., for a time.

The same storm has pummeled the U.S. for days as it moved cross country, dumping heavy snow from California to the Midwest and inundating other areas with rain.

Duluth, Minn., is cleaning up more than 21 inches of snow. Major highways reopened in Wyoming and Colorado after blizzard conditions and drifting snow blocked them.

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Max Verstappen claimed second place in the 2019 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, which he accepted was as good as he could have hoped for against a dominant display by race winner Lewis Hamilton.

“There wasn’t much more we could have done,” the Red Bull driver said after the finish. “On this track today Mercedes and Lewis were just a bit too quick.

“But as a team we had a good strategy, good pit stops, and the car was working really well, so second place is a good result on this track.

“The pace was good and overall we were quite a bit faster than the other guys which is a nice feeling,” he added. “I passed the Ferrari on the track and we could do our own race.”

  • Hamilton signs off season with big win in Abu Dhabi

Even so, Verstappen finished almost 17 seconds behind the race winner, and complained throughout the second half of the race about his car’s throttle response – something he’s suffered from before in 2019.

The problems began after his pit stop on lap 25. He described it as a “handbrake effect”, and the Red Bull pit wall was unable to recommend anything to help his plight.

“Torque holes and throttle,” he explained after the finish. “There was some delays and stuff, so it was not great.

“When I got on the throttle, it wasn’t doing what I wanted. It did cost me lap time,” he continued. “We couldn’t fix it, so we drove around the problem.

“At the end of the day it wouldn’t have made a difference to the result,” he admitted. “It wouldn’t have given me the win today.”

Verstappen said he still hadn’t been told by the team what the precise problem with the car had been today.

“I’m not sure yet what happened exactly because they didn’t want to tell me on the radio,” he told Motorsport.com. “They just said that there was nothing they could do from their side, so it also doesn’t matter what it is.

“I’ll have to find out,” he shrugged. “But most of the time it’s fine for me.”

Despite the glitches, Verstappen still managed to secure his best ever result in the drivers championship, finishing in third place behind Hamilton and his Mercedes team mate Valtteri Bottas having seen off a strong threat from both of the Ferrari drivers.

“Of course very happy to finish the season like this,” he said. “To be in front of the Ferraris in the championship for me I think was a good achievement.

“We had good wins, a few poles,” he said of his season as a whole. “But for next year, we of course want to fight for the title, so we have to step it up.

“I think as a team we can be pleased with the improvement we made through the season,” he added. “But as a team we want to move forward, so next year we want to be fighting for the title.

“We need to push flat out to close the gap, but looking at the last few races we have made a positive step. It’s a great ending and now we just want to focus ahead and be even more competitive in 2020.”

Gallery: The beautiful wives and girlfriends of F1 drivers

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The Argentine forward has picked up yet another individual accolade after a stellar personal year, winning the prize for the first time since 2015

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Barcelona superstar Lionel Messi claimed a record sixth Ballon d’Or in Paris on Monday night ahead of Liverpool’s Virgil van Dijk and Juventus’ Cristiano Ronaldo.

The Argentine moved one clear of Ronaldo after the pair had been locked on five awards each as he reclaimed the title he last won in 2015, with the Portuguese claiming the two subsequent gongs and Luka Modric surprisingly picking up the accolade last year to end the 10-year dominance of the two footballing icons.

This year’s victor finished astonishingly fifth in last term’s rankings and has come back with a vengeance this time around, producing a typically outstanding year in front of goal for Barca, hitting 40 strikes this calendar year and registering a further 17 assists to boot.

The forward did so in just 3516 minutes on the field, putting his club tally at slightly better than a goal or assist every 61.7 minutes.

He also claimed a tenth La Liga trophy and a Supercopa de Espana but was denied in the final of the Copa del Rey and was on the wrong end of a 4-0 battering at Anfield that saw Liverpool eventually go on to claim the Champions League title.

Messi did finish as the top scorer in both the Champions League and La Liga and has already picked up another individual prize in the form of FIFA’s ‘The Best’ Men’s award.

He was unable, however, to inspire his country to silverware at the Copa America, being forced to settle for third place after losing to Brazil in the semi-finals before beating Chile in the playoff.

Liverpool defender Van Dijk finished second, with team-mates Alisson, Mohamed Salah and Sadio Mane coming in at seventh, fifth and fourth, respectively, as the Reds lifted the Champions League and came within a point of winning their first Premier League trophy, losing just one league game all season.

Ronaldo was left in third place – his lowest ranking since failing to make the podium in 2010. His calendar year remains impressive, but his numbers fall short of the exceedingly high standards the 34-year-old has set over the years.

Le légendaire créateur de Comics porte plainte contre son ancien directeur d’affaires, Jerardo Olivarez, qui se serait servi des affaires bancaires et professionnelles de Stan Lee pour se refaire une santé financière…

Depuis quelques temps, d’étranges rumeurs mêlées d’accusations gravitent autour de Stan Lee, 95 ans au compteur. Grosses sommes d’argent débitées de son compte en banque sans son accord, objets de collections évaporés de son musée, plusieurs personnes de son entourage licenciées… Le comble étant atteint par un de ses associés, qui aurait demandé à une infirmière de lui faire des prises de sang afin qu’il puisse signer des comics avec son propre ADN et faire ainsi augmenter leur valeur marchande. Oui oui, vous avez bien lu ! En d’autres termes, Stan “The Man” Lee serait notamment victime d’abus de confiance sur personne âgée, et de mauvais traitement, depuis le décès de son épouse en juillet 2017, par des personnes gravitant autour de lui qui en veulent forcément à son (très) gros patrimoine.

L’intéressé est monté au créneau il y a quelques jours, en envoyant au site (réputé trash) TMZ une vidéo dans laquelle il apparaît particulièrement remonté, menaçant quiconque continuerait à colporter ces vilaines rumeurs malveillantes sur lui et / ou son entourage.

L’ennui, c’est que ces rumeurs ne semblent pas si infondées que ça. Deadline rapporte en effet que Stan Lee vient de porter plainte contre Jerardo Olivarez, son ancien directeur d’affaires. L’intéressé, qui fut associé à la fille de Stan Lee, aurait pris le contrôle des affaires bancaires et professionnelles de Stan Lee, afin de se refaire une santé financière.

Quelques jours après le décès de Joan Lee en juillet 2017, Olivarez et ses associés ont remercié le banquier de Stan Lee, et ont fait transférer 4,6 millions $ de son compte. Dans la plainte, il est également précisé que son ancien associé a convaincu le dessinateur de 95 ans de signer une procuration à Uri Litvak, l’avocat d’Olivarez, indiquant qu’il prendrait la relève de Stan Lee. Jerardo Olivarez aurait par ailleurs frauduleusement fait faire un don de 300 000 dollars de l’argent de Stan Lee à Hands of Respects, une association créée par ce dernier, mais dont il ne s’occupe plus, avant d’apprendre que cet argent a finalement directement atterrit dans la poche d’Olivarez…

Pour “Mon Ket”, sa première réalisation, le comédien belge François Damiens se grime et nous livre un film à sketchs entièrement tourné en caméras cachées. Voici la bande-annonce.

François Damiens passe derrière la caméra ! Pour son premier long métrage en tant que réalisateur, le comédien belge se met en scène dans Mon Ket (“mon fils” en bruxellois). Tourné sous forme de sketchs en caméra cachée le film suit Dany Versavel (Damiens) un détenu qui va s’évader de prison afin de retrouver son fils de 15 ans Sullivan (attention à la prononciation!) pour lui apprendre tout ce qu’il sait. Un apprentissage à son image. Au pied de biche, sans pudeur ni retenue. Mais là où l’on ouvait craindre le pire, se cache peut être le meilleur…

La bande-annonce dévoilée ce jour nous montre un François Damiens méconnaissable. Le néo-réalisateur se faisait maquiller durant 4 heures chaque jour : prothèses dentaires, décolleurs d’oreilles, faux ventre, fausses cuisses… Une métamorphose nécessaire afin d’éviter que les intervenants ne le reconnaissent. Le réalisateur explique : “C’est en effet le gros écueil de la caméra cachée : quand vous êtes reconnu, vous devez jeter la prise à la poubelle et quand vous pensez avoir été reconnu, ça fausse le jeu et ça plombe la scène… C’est comme raconter une blague à quelqu’un en se demandant s’il ne connaît pas déjà la chute !”

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Mais si Mon Ket se compose de divers sketchs, le film raconte pour autant une histoire, celle d’un père prêt à tout pour son fils. François Damiens explique : “J’avais depuis longtemps en tête l’idée d’écrire un film qui parlerait de la filiation, de la paternité. C’est un thème qui me touche beaucoup, celui de ses parents et donc des pères qui essaient de faire du mieux possible pour élever leur enfant mais qui au final font tout le contraire ! Il y a chez eux une vraie volonté de bien faire mais en les regardant agir, on sait nous que ce n’est pas la bonne façon de procéder et qu’évidemment c’est le gamin qui va morfler !”

Mon Ket sort dans nos salles le 30 mai prochain. 

L’acteur Chris Pratt vient d’annoncer que le tournage des “Gardiens de la Galaxie 3” se déroulerait l’année prochaine. (Attention, spoilers !!)

SPOILERS – Attention, l’article ci-dessous dévoile de potentiels spoilers. Si vous ne souhaitez pas en connaitre la teneur, merci de ne pas lire ce qui suit…

Chris Pratt a souhaité, en fin de semaine dernière sur les réseaux sociaux, un joyeux anniversaire à Pom Klementieff, sa partenaire dans Les Gardiens de la Galaxie 2 et le récent Avengers: Infinity War. “Joyeux anniversaire Pom Klementieff, que beaucoup d’entre vous connaissez sous le nom de Mantis”, déclare l’interprète de Star-Lord. “C’est une artiste si unique, talentueuse et passionnée. Je suis impatient de commencer à tourner Les Gardiens de la Galaxie 3 avec elle l’année prochaine ! J’espère que tu passes une bonne journée, Pom !”

Avec ce message plein d’affection, Chris Pratt en profite donc pour révéler que le tournage des Gardiens de la Galaxie 3 sera lancé en 2019. Plutôt logique puisque le réalisateur James Gunn avait annoncé préalablement une sortie en salles pour 2020. Mais, outre le début de tournage du film, la petite phrase de l’acteur sous-entend autre chose et si vous n’avez pas vu Avengers: Infinity War, nous vous déconseillons d’allez lire sous le post Instagram ci-dessous sous peine d’être fortement spoilé ! 

Happy Birthday @pom.klementieff whom many of you know as Mantis!!! She’s such a unique, talented and driven artist. Can’t wait to start shooting Guardians Vol. 3 with her next year! Hope you’re having a good day Pom!

Une publication partagée par chris pratt (@prattprattpratt) le 3 Mai 2018 à 10 :24 PDT

Si Chris Pratt annonce des retrouvailles entre Star-Lord et Mantis au générique des Gardiens de la Galaxie 3, cela signifie qu’ils seront alors revenus d’entre les morts. Les deux personnages font en effet partie des victimes à la fin d’Avengers: Infinity War, lorsque Thanos se voit pourvu des six pierres d’infinité. Alors, comment analyser la déclaration de Pratt ? Le débat est lancé…

Chris Pratt sera à l’affiche de “Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom” le 6 juin prochain :

Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom Bande-annonce VO

 

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Il y a Alban Lenoir et Marion Cotillard. Mais difficile de ne pas avoir d’yeux pour Ayline Aksoy-Etaix, révélation de “Gueule d’ange” qui tient tête à ses partenaires et impressionne. Et les deux stars du film ne tarissent pas d’éloges à son sujet.

Présenté dans la catégorie Un Certain Regard, Gueule d’ange concourt également pour la Caméra d’Or, prix de la meilleure première œuvre vue pendant tout le festival, car il s’agit du premier long métrage mis en scène par Vanessa Filho. Il sortira ensuite dans nos salles le 23 mai.

Gueule d'ange Bande-annonce VF

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