Trailers, videos and other exciting content for film releases from independent film distributor Thunderbird Releasing. You can also find us on facebook/ twitter @TBirdReleasing
Thunderbird Releasing is a UK-based independent distributor specialising in art house, world and independent cinema, part of the Thunderbird group.
I just finished watching this movie on Peacock and it’s a great story!! The animation is very beautiful and unique. The sound really hits hard especially her struggle and perseverance in a blizzard. I just wish it continued with the ending.
Sad her mother and brother never allowed her to leave. From what I read the people who ran the asylum didn't feel she needed to be there and tried to convince her brother or mother to take her.
I do not understand why all this criticism… He did very well considering he is not a pro actor and also, having to portray an incomprehensible, decadent, unstable and irresolute young man. He did well, indeed. The character of Octave himself is such that he does not inspire any sympathy nor understanding (like: heya, nothing ever goes well for you?? You're such a pain in the…belly!!) - even in the novel I had the exact same feeling, the character is troublesome.
After reading Half A Yellow Sun. I couldn’t read anything for months ! The trauma? My imagination is nothing compared to what the people of Biafra/Nigeria went through. 💔
This is such a heartfelt cry for life. On the one hand the guys "balance sheet" is kind of poor, but on the other its his very personal kind of weirdness that not many will share and makes him unique already.
I have never heard of this movie in my life lol I can't imagine how it would be interesting but I would watch it at least once Aaron Paul seems to be the only interesting character in the movie
Eva Green turned this movie down due to scheduling conflicts with Dumbo. Oh man! I love her… i wish she had done this film… Virginia Woolf screams Eva Green.
Not too crazy about this one. It's a sequel of sorts to the Camille Claudel biopic starring Isabelle Adjani, which to my eye was much more dramatic and interesting, since it showed Camille as a vibrant and talented woman who quickly lost her marbles. Now Camille is confined in a nuthouse and basically that's the ballgame. She's clearly cracked. Her brother Paul, who is on the outside, seems equally cracked, absorbed as he is in the usual Christian mysticism. Dumont loves to empty the screen, so your mind drifts to the laundry and the stray sock you lost while transferring your clothes to the dryer; what you're going to have to eat after the movie is over; whether you might try to pick up the hot chick three rows in front of you, etc. The movie "builds" to a big confrontation between Camille and Paul, in which she begs him to release her, and even her doctor suggests that she might be released. Paul, quoting the Bible (or something), says "Sorry, honey, we must keep you here." So screw Paul. There's one moderately compelling scene in which one of the lunatics, sensing Camille's misery, tries to console her, and Camille angrily brushes the lunatic away. I felt sorry for that lunatic.