Lots of fantasy, lively dialogues, colorful characters: François Ozon has fun with Mon crime, a detective comedy adapted from a play and which skilfully plays the card of feminism without falling into caricature. Like a post air
Our favorite great apes come out of their jungle to deliver an eighth album with, as always, high-flying collaborators (Thundercat, Tame Impala, Bad Bunny, Beck…). The most successful virtual group in the world (they have accumulated nearly 18 million albums sold), born twenty-five years ago in the collocation in Notting Hill of Damon Albarn, hyperactive singer of Blur, with the designer of Tank Girl , Jamie Hewlett, wanted in this opus to carry “the sound of change and the chorus of the collective”. On the text side, the promise is kept. Let’s be honest, some of these ten titles suffer from gross sluggishness and laziness. However, in this clever mix of funk-electro-soul-hip-hop-funk-pop-dub, there are some dancing (“Cracker Island”), soaring (“Silent Running”) and cathartic (“Oil”) gems. Above all, one can only admire the spirit of innovation of the four cartoon gorillas created by the duo, who, with the help of Google Labs, took Times Square and Piccadilly Circus by storm this winter, mind-blowing virtual giants. playing above the crowd, pixel Kings Kongs devouring buildings with their beats… A revolutionary immersive performance. Cracker Island (Parlophone / WEA).
Stop! It’s time… to read. For the second consecutive year, the National Book Center (CNL), in collaboration with the Ministry of National Education and Youth and all of its partners, invites French women and men to a “quarter of an hour reading” national, March 10 at 10 a.m. In 2022, marked by the Great National Cause, the first edition of the National Quarter of an Hour was attended by nearly 2,000 structures: associations, communities, administrations, libraries, media libraries, companies, social centers, nursing homes… The project is the same this year: open a book for fifteen minutes minimum, whoever you are, whatever you are doing, wherever you are. The CNL invites structures wishing to join the event to register on its website. A practical online guide is also available to participants to help them prepare for their “quarter of an hour of reading”. They will be able to share their initiatives via social networks with the hashtag