Saturday, August 3, 2013

Watch New Movie Nana No Survey on FULL HD Format

This spare, haunting, deceptively slight film - marking the feature debut of French filmmaker Valerie Massadian - zeroes in on the behavior and existential state of its 4-year-old protagonist. Growing up in rural France, Nana lives in a seemingly idyllic environment, but Massadian increasingly complicates our notion of the child's innocence. Opening with a matter-of-fact depiction of the butchering of a pig (Nana lives on her grandfather's pig farm), the film gradually tightens its focus to convey the child's perspective as she entertains herself in solitude. The subtlety and ingenuity with which Massadian reveals aspects of Nana's environment through the details of her playing is astounding, and only gradually do we come to realize the full, disturbing extent of her situation. Founded on the remarkable rapport between filmmaker and infant actress - "There's not one word, one gesture - nothing - that I imposed on her. We played", Massadian told Interview Magazine - NANA is a delicate, unsettling, and uniquely affecting film. (c) Anthology
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Movie Title : Nana
Genre Movie :Drama
Mpaa Rating : Unrated
Release Date : Jan 25, 2013 Limited

Actors :Kelyna Lecomte,Alain Sabras,Marie Delmas


Nana

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Review For Nana

Driven by a combination of narrative economy and emotional expansiveness, Valérie Massadian's "Nana" is as difficult to pin down as the inner life of the tiny human at its center.
Jeannette Catsoulis-New York Times

Barely over an hour, the sketch feels lovely, unhurried and a bit insignificant.
Joshua Rothkopf-Time Out New York

A fiction film that documents the unpredictable, unscripted actions of its pint-size lead, Nana offers new ways of thinking about childhood, or, at the very least, about children in movies.
Melissa Anderson-Village Voice

It's a quiet and often lovely film, scored only with sounds of the forest (which we see, as Nana does, as a magical place) and the wind, letting a child make her own story.
Moira MacDonald-Seattle Times

Tedious and slightly sickening, Valérie Massadian's debut feature focuses on a child but is hardly a children's movie.
Eric Monder-Film Journal International

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