A collection of documentaries looking at different facets of life in France
Far from the inevitable clichés that fiction sometimes continues to propagate (Oh là là, etc.), this collection of documentaries undoes the ready-made ideas about France. Each documentary echoes a singular or collective destiny by meeting caregivers, farmers, workers, journalists, kiosks, etc. In contrasting geographies, as close as possible to a plural reality, here is an intimate and social depiction of France through the faces of those who live there.
Far from the inevitable clichés that fiction sometimes continues to propagate (Oh là là, etc.), this collection of documentaries undoes the ready-made ideas about France. Each documentary echoes a singular or collective destiny by meeting caregivers, farmers, workers, journalists, kiosks, etc. In contrasting geographies, as close as possible to a plural reality, here is an intimate and social depiction of France through the faces of those who live there.
Far from the inevitable clichés that fiction sometimes continues to propagate (Oh là là, etc.), this collection of documentaries undoes the ready-made ideas about France. Each documentary echoes a singular or collective destiny by meeting caregivers, farmers, workers, journalists, kiosks, etc. In contrasting geographies, as close as possible to a plural reality, here is an intimate and social depiction of France through the faces of those who live there.
A collection of documentaries looking at different facets of life in France
Far from the inevitable clichés that fiction sometimes continues to propagate (Oh là là, etc.), this collection of documentaries undoes the ready-made ideas about France. Each documentary echoes a singular or collective destiny by meeting caregivers, farmers, workers, journalists, kiosks, etc. In contrasting geographies, as close as possible to a plural reality, here is an intimate and social depiction of France through the faces of those who live there.
Far from the inevitable clichés that fiction sometimes continues to propagate (Oh là là, etc.), this collection of documentaries undoes the ready-made ideas about France. Each documentary echoes a singular or collective destiny by meeting caregivers, farmers, workers, journalists, kiosks, etc. In contrasting geographies, as close as possible to a plural reality, here is an intimate and social depiction of France through the faces of those who live there.