Guillaume Nicloux • France • 2014 • Michel Houellebecq was believed kidnapped. But was he really?
A novelist named Michel Houellebecq sits at a table in Paris, pontificating on a bizarre range of topics. Three men then appear and without explanation whisk him off to a house in the French countryside. A strange camaraderie emerges between Houellebecq and his captors—they joke and drink together, and indulge his requests for cigarettes and things to read. The purpose, not to mention the forces behind this abduction, become increasingly unclear.
Wading into the hypotheticals of the real-life 2011 disappearance of perhaps France’s most widely-read writer, The Kidnapping of Michel Houellebecq is anchored in a magnetic and oddly charismatic performance by Houellebecq himself. Guillaume Nicloux’s film premiered at Berlin, Thessaloniki, Festival du Nouveau Cinéma, and Tribeca, where it won a Jury Award.
Sophie Fiennes • UK & Ireland • 2012 • A journey through cinema and philosophy, Zizek-style.
Some have called Slavoj Žižek the Elvis of cultural theory. A Lacanian and a Marxist, the Slovenian philosopher possesses an infectious zeal and a voracious appetite for popular culture, casting his ...