Billetterie
Descriptif
Join your guide Juliette for this cinema-themed experience where you'll be taken on a 2 hour walk into the history of the French New Wave cinema movement and discover movie locations, followed by drinks and a screening of the timeless "Pierrot le Fou" by Jean-Luc Godard with English subtitles at Luminor cinema in the heart of the Latin Quarter.
The Quartier Latin is a highly cinephile district. Known for its arthouse cinemas, it naturally attracted the young movie critics becoming directors from the New Wave. Jean-Luc Godard was particularly linked to this area. From the Luxembourg garden where he shot one of his first short movies, « Tous les garçons s’appellent Patrick », to the Seine banks where we find back Jean-Paul Belmondo and Jean Seberg in "A Bout de Souffle", passing through la Sorbonne and some movie theaters, the tour will allow us to talk about the begining of its cinema, the directors he knew but also about the youth of the time. Photos and videos on an Ipad.
After this walk, if you would like to attend Lost in Frenchlation's screening of "Pierrot le Fou", you will arrive at Luminor cinema at 7:30pm to enjoy a drink and the exhibition of "Pierrot le Fou" posters by Plakat in the Luminor salon. ☞ You can purchase tickets online here: https://www.luminor-hoteldeville.com/reserver/
Please not that the tickets for the movie ARE NOT INCLUDED in the tickets for the tour, and must be purchased separately.
Looking forward to meeting you there!
Ciné-Balade offers tours in Paris to discover how Paris has always been a center in the history of the cinema. Visit Paris and learn how the city embodies the cinema. Famous landmarks, unknown buildings, discrete passage ways, highly praised restaurants, forgotten theaters : Paris loves cinema and the cinema loves Paris.
Lost in Frenchlation's mission is simple – we want to bring world-renown French cinema to the international community in Paris by showing French films with English subtitles, and we want to be a hub for the international community to get to know each other as well as native Parisians.