|
Duration: 76 sec. | Nudity: yes | Creator: unknown |
New Filesize: N/A | Sound: yes | Old Filesize: 47 mb |
File Format: AOMedia Video 1 (WebM/AV1) | Resolution: 1280x576 | Added: 2017-Mar-12 |
Alternate Names: Sylvie Voyer, Sylvie Voyer, Sylvie Voyet, Sylvie Voyet
Physical Characteristics: N/A
First Appearances:
Most Important Roles: N/A
Career Highlights:
Sylvie Testud, born January 17, 1971 in Lyon, was raised by her mother after her parents separated when she was two. She studied history and acting in Paris, joining Cours Florent and later the Conservatory under Jacques Lassalle and Catherine Hiegel. Her early roles included The Story of the Boy Who Wanted to Be Kissed (1994) and Le Plus Bel Age... (1995). In 1997, she gained international recognition with Beyond Silence, winning a German Film Prize for Best Actress after learning German, clarinet, and sign language. She received her first French César nomination in 1998 for Karnaval. Notable performances followed, including La Captive (2000) and Les Blessures assassines (2001), earning another César nomination.
Release Year: 2005
Nation: France
Alternative Title: Miénk az élet, It's Our Life!
Director: Gérard Krawczyk
Writer: Gérard Krawczyk, Jean-Marie Gourio
Producer(s):
Companies: Flach Film, France 2 Cinéma, Oz Production
Genre: Comedy, Comedy Film
Awards: N/A
Similar:
Louise and her mother Blanche run 'L'Etape', a café restaurant in a Savoy village. Their establishment faces off against 'Le Virage', owned by Lucie and her daughters. The two cafés have been locked in rivalry for years, but tensions escalate during a truckers' strike that paralyzes the village.
Directed by Gérard Krawczyk in 2005, 'La vie est à nous!' is a comedy film set against the backdrop of a strike in a small French village. The story revolves around two café-restaurants, L'Etape and Le Virage, each run by families with a complex rivalry between them. Louise and Blanche take in troubled youth at their establishment, turning it into a makeshift family for these problem children. While not much is detailed about the strike itself, it serves as a catalyst to intensify the tensions between the two cafés.