Sonnez Après Minuit 2021
Baron Potowski, a vampire of good composition, expropriated from his vault in the Montparnasse cemetery, is forced to live in low-cost housing, in the midst of the living.
Baron Potowski, a vampire of good composition, expropriated from his vault in the Montparnasse cemetery, is forced to live in low-cost housing, in the midst of the living.
Erné Couteau, a lazy and naive young man, overcomes his shyness to attend a strange job interview that will change his life forever.
Summer is ending, it's time for silaging in the peaceful Breton countryside. While farmers are harvesting the corn, two brothers, aged 8 and 12, are alone in their big house. Left to their own devices, they are masters of a vast kingdom and feel free to do whatever they want. They only forbid themselves to go upstairs in the house.
Virginie, a charming young woman, has an appointment with a friend recently rediscovered on Facebook. In the cafe, a young man, Leonard takes advantage of her falsified delay of the appointment to approach her. What may seem like a simple attempt at seduction may be a more Machiavellian strategy. Leonard was once Leonore and Virginie's lover.
One evening, in his apartment in Paris, Lorenzo is getting ready to receive Marvin for the first time, a boy he really likes. Marvin shows up at the door with Thomas, a homeless man he met on the street in need of a shower. Lorenzo doesn’t dare say no.
2040. Jeanne, a woman in her thirties, has recently left Paris to settle in an isolated house bordering a forest. But a wild boar keeps wrecking her fence and her garden. Jeanne fires away and nearly kills a group of hikers. A wildlife mediator is sent to the scene in order to solve this bizarre neighbourhood quarrel...
At the beginning of the 70s, Jean Genet is in Tangier, he is in his sixties and he no longer writes. He lives in the El Minza hotel, a palace, where he spends entire days reading, smoking and sleeping (he takes Nembutal, a barbiturate used as a sleeping pill). He only goes out at the beginning of the afternoon to have a coffee with milk in one of the bars of Petit Socco. He sometimes meets the young Moroccan writer Mohamed Choukri there. Their discussion is banal, friendly. Sometimes they talk about literature. Genet no longer writes, but is still inhabited by it.