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Crousse, Nicolas


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En la revista de prensa europea se han citado hasta el momento 2 artículos de este autor/ esta autora.


Lamentablemente, todavía no se encuentra disponible la traducción en española de este texto, por lo tanto, solamente podemos poner a su disposición la versión inglesa.


Le Soir - Bélgica | 29/01/2008

Belgian division reflected in the country's film industry

"Does Belgium exist? If this question is subject to political controversy, in the film world the answer is now loud and clear: 'No!'. Confirming more than ever the tendency of 2006, 2007 marks Belgium's spectacular divorce", writes Nicolas Crousse. "On the one hand, for Flemish cinema which has never, commercially speaking, done so well, this is simply a historical year. ... [On the other hand] French-speaking film statistics are average. ... The country's French-speaking audience doesn't consume films from the north, which they barely know at all. And in the Flanders region filmgoers are no more keen to discover what films their southern neighbours are making. At the end of the day, both sides are dragging along both trophies and complexes. The North has a bad reputation, but is in diabolically good health. The South looks alright, but not in the mirror [with French-speaking films only really meeting success abroad]."

Lamentablemente, todavía no se encuentra disponible la traducción en española de este texto, por lo tanto, solamente podemos poner a su disposición la versión inglesa.


Le Soir - Bélgica | 09/08/2006

Dreamworks sparks a new Franco-British war

"Something tells us that the latest production from the DreamWorks studios will be the stuff of many a conversation on the Paris-to-London Eurostar," writes Nicolas Crousse. "In 'Flushed Away', which will be coming to our big screens later this year, war rages between British rats and French frogs. The war is primarily one of clichés. On one side is the rat pack, led by upper-crust Roddy from Kensington and Rita an underground ginger rat in tight Union Jack jeans ... On the other side is the amphibian clan ... Yes, you guessed it: in this face-off between cultures which pits the really corny ... against the really cool it is the Brits who win ... The French have in fact become for the English-speaking world what Belgium once was for France : the ideal scapegoat. The wheel turns."

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