Scène de Parfait amour (1996)
Détails de la scène
Durée: 514 sec.. | Nudité: yes | Créateur: zorg |
Nouvelle taille de fichier: 26 mb (75% saved) | Son: yes | Ancienne taille de fichier: 102 mb |
Format de fichier: AOMedia Video 1 (WebM/AV1) | Résolution: 720x432 | Ajouté: 2014-12-16 |
Actrices dans cette scène

Nom de naissance: Isabelle Renauld
Date de naissance: 1965-11-24
Lieu de naissance: Saint-Malo, Coaticook, Canada
Détails
Noms alternatifs: Ezabel Reno
Caractéristiques physiques: N/A
Carrière
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Récompenses
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Biographie complète
Isabelle Renauld (born 24 November 1966 in Saint-Malo, Ille-et-Vilaine) is a French actress. She trained at the Nanterre Amandiers theatre school directed by Patrice Chéreau from 1985 to 1987. She was made a Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters in January 2010.
Born in Saint-Malo to a pharmacist father and a mother who was an IFOP researcher, her parents divorced when she was 5 years old and she grew up with her mother and her sister, who is 3 years her senior. She quickly developed a passion for theatre and at the age of 16 decided to leave Brittany to devote herself to acting in Paris. She was admitted to the "free class" of the Cours Florent in 1984 where she met Pierre Romans who encouraged her to try for the Nanterre Amandiers school which he runs with Patrice Chéreau. She succeeded in the competition when only the top twenty become part of Patrice Chéreau's cast. She learned her trade with Agnes Jaoui, Vincent Pérez, Valeria Bruni Tedeschi, Bruno Todeschini, Marc Citti.
She met Laurent Malet there, who became her companion and the father of her son Théo.
In 1990, she landed the role of Isabelle in L'Opération Corned-Beef alongside Jean Reno and Christian Clavier. She rose to prominence in 1996 with the scandalous Parfait Amour! by Catherine Breillat which earned her the Prix Michel-Simon.
A year later, in 1997, she met Theo Angelopoulos and acted in Eternity and a Day which received the Golden Palm at Cannes in 1998.
She has appeared in three films by François Dupeyron in 1999, 2001 and 2003 (What is life?, Mr. Ibrahim and the Flowers of the Koran, and the House of Officers), two by Philippe Lioret in 2006 and 2011 (Don't Worry, I'm fine and All Our Desires), and two by Catherine Breillat.
She lives in Paris but often returns to Saint-Malo to "recharge" and to reconnect with her roots.
À propos du film: Parfait amour (1996)

Titre alternatif: Parfait amour!, Eine perfekte Liebe, Tökéletes szerelem, Doskonala milosc, Kusursuz ask, Perfect Love
Réalisateur: Catherine Breillat
Scénariste: Catherine Breillat
Production & Genre
Producteur(s): Producer: Françoise Guglielmi, Georges Benayoun
Sociétés: CB Films, Dacia Films, La Sept Cinéma, CNC, Canal+
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Mots-clés
Mots-clés: woman director
Histoire
Parfait amour begins with Christophe, a young entrepreneur in his twenties, murdering Frédérique, his lover who is a doctor in her thirties with two children from previous marriages. The film then shifts to a police reenactment of the crime and an interview with Frédérique's teenage daughter before flashing back to the start of their affair. Throughout their relationship, Frédérique is attracted to Christophe's sweet side but is emotionally troubled due to her past divorces and ambivalent about her sexuality. Their relationship becomes strained due to Christophe's misogynistic friend Philippe and issues surrounding Christophe's own sexuality. The film explores whether their intense attraction ultimately leads to mutual destruction.
Résumé
Directed by Catherine Breillat in 1996, Parfait amour is a French drama that delves into the complex dynamics of a toxic romantic relationship between two adults from different backgrounds. The film, often described as an 'anatomy of a murder,' explores themes of sexuality, emotional baggage, and the destructive power of attraction and expectation. Despite its provocative subject matter and controversial director, there is limited information available about the film's context or significance.