The Boston French Film Festival returns with an exciting lineup that captures the textures, tensions, and petits bonheurs (small joys) of contemporary French life. The festival opens with Three Friends, Emmanuel Mouret's bittersweet comedy about love, infidelity, and emotional entanglement among a trio of women. Catherine Deneuve leads The President's Wife, a sly comedy about politician Bernadette Chirac's bid to step out from her husband's shadow. Winner of the 2024 Jury Prize and Best Actor award in the Un Certain Regard section of Cannes, Souleymane's Story is a gripping portrait of life on the margins. Holy Cow brings charm to the lineup with a tale about a teenage cheesemaker chasing a contest prize, while Night Call delivers high-stakes thrills as a locksmith races through Brussels during a night of unrest. Alexandre de La Patellière and Matthieu Delaporte's sweeping new adaptation of The Count of Monte Cristo reminds us that French cinema, like the country's literature, still revels in grand tales of betrayal, justice, and revenge.
Together, these films offer a vivid snapshot of a society in motion—ever-evolving while remaining rooted in the passionate pursuit of artistic and intellectual truth. Grab some French wine and cheese at Taste and join us for these evocative stories.
Schedule of Events:
11:00 am–12:45 pm - Holy Cow (Vingt dieux)
Directed by Louise Courvoisier (France, 2024, 92 min.). French with English subtitles.
A breakout hit in French cinemas, this refreshing comedy follows 18-year-old Totone (first-time actor Clément Faveau) who, following the untimely death of his father, is unexpectedly thrust into adult responsibilities—caring for his younger sister, keeping their struggling Jura farm afloat, and navigating the hard realities of rural life. When he learns of a regional competition offering €30,000 for the best Comté cheese, he throws himself into an unlikely plan to secure their future—one curd at a time.
Winner of the Youth Award in Cannes’s Un Certain Regard section, as well as the Cesar Awards for Best First Film and Most Promising Actress, Holy Cow is a warmhearted coming-of-age tale that celebrates both the hardscrabble rhythms of French agricultural life and the deep emotional ties that bind family, land, and tradition. Director Louise Courvoisier—who grew up in the Jura region—draws on nonprofessional local actors to craft a film as rooted and flavorful as the cheese at its center.
“Holy Cow proves that having realism in storytelling doesn’t mean you have to be gloomy. An uplifting, scrappy comedy that should delight independent cinema fans.” —City AM
Members
$12.00
Nonmembers
$15.00
Location: Harry and Mildred Remis Auditorium (Auditorium 161)
1:30 pm–4:30 pm - The Count of Monte Cristo (Le Comte de Monte-Cristo)
Directed by Alexandre de La Patellière and Matthieu Delaporte (France and Belgium, 2024, 178 min.). French, Romanian, Italian, English, and Latin with English subtitles.
An epic story of betrayal, reinvention, and retribution bursts back to life in this lavish adaptation of Alexandre Dumas’s timeless classic. Pierre Niney (Frantz; Yves Saint Laurent) stars as Edmond Dantès, a wrongfully imprisoned sailor who escapes and returns to Paris transformed—now fabulously wealthy, strategically calculating, and determined to dismantle the lives of the men who betrayed him.
Directors Alexandre de La Patellière and Matthieu Delaporte deliver an emotionally resonant swashbuckler that honors the sweeping scale of Dumas’s novel while pulsing with contemporary energy. With a stellar cast that includes Anaïs Demoustier, Bastien Bouillon, and Laurent Lafitte, this grand cinematic spectacle brims with buried treasure, romance, and elegant revenge.
“Stirringly acted and gorgeously filmed…. leaves previous versions of Dumas’s famous revenge saga in the dust.” —New York Times (Critic’s Pick)
Members
$12.00
Nonmembers
$15.00
Location: Harry and Mildred Remis Auditorium (Auditorium 161)