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19 votes
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Historians dispute Bayeux tapestry penis tally after lengthy debate
21 votes -
Le Bureau des Légendes/The Bureau (2015 - 2020) is a 10/10 show
I don't know how well known this show is. Maybe I'm saying something obvious, like "hey, have you all heard about The Wire?", but in most of my social group this completely slipped under the...
I don't know how well known this show is. Maybe I'm saying something obvious, like "hey, have you all heard about The Wire?", but in most of my social group this completely slipped under the radar. Since the beginning of the war in Ukraine I started following discussions about geopolitics and international conflicts on our local discussion board, and in there it's the opposite, apparently everyone knows it.
It's a show about deep undercover agents working for DGSE, the french equivalent of CIA.
It has two main layers. Firstly it's apparently quite accurate with regards to how real intelligence agencies work, plus it's obviously strongly inspired by real events. It mostly deals with ISIS, but also with Russia, relations between France and the US and other issues. This is very interesting on its own.
Secondly it's basically a psychological drama/thriller. The lives of undercover agents consist of constantly lying, constantly being on guard and never fully trusting anybody, and there cannot be a tangible division between their professional and their personal lives because they can never fully switch off. And human failures in their profession, whether small or large, cannot be fully avoided.
The premise of this whole show is exploring how those failures happen and what are their consequences. And those consequences are often terrible, so it's sometimes a heavy show to watch.
What I love about The Bureau is how it's all relatively civil, showing things without exaggeration, overly emotional music or other stylization. I want to say it's very un-american in this aspect, and on one hand mean that, I'm incredibly tired of film makers beating me over the head with horrible things like slow motion shots accompanied by emotionally simplistic music, as if I'm too stupid to understand what I'm supposed to feel simply from what's happening in the story.
But at the same time The Wire is also american and it's a good example of a show that does the exact opposite (and I love it for that). The Bureau does not go as far as The Wire, if only because human emotions are a much bigger focus of the show. However it is much closer in style and in quality to The Wire than to some imaginary "hollywood average". Overall it doesn't feel like it's playing tricks on you. People die and suffer horribly, and sometimes it is characters you love, but it doesn't feel like some cheap "ha! I got you, I bet you're devastated now!" and it doesn't happen often, for shock value (edit: actually suffering does happen all the time, but killing off characters does not).
In addition to the style feeling quite fresh in the context of mainstream cinematography, it's full of great and outside of France relatively unknown actors. They make it easy to fall in love with many of the characters. The characters have layers and development and nobody is black and white, it's a delight to watch them.
I'm putting it next to The Wire, Better Call Saul or Breaking Bad as a 10/10 show.
13 votes -
Cannes 2025 competition: Ari Aster, Joachim Trier, Luc Dardenne, Jean-Pierre Dardenne, Kelly Reichardt, Julia Ducournau and Wes Anderson among lineup
7 votes -
Sébastien Tellier - Fingers of Steel (2008)
7 votes -
Igorrr - ADHD (2025)
19 votes -
Some towns in France and Belgium are giving away free chickens
9 votes -
Discover the interior of the future TGV INOUI
10 votes -
Mika Biereth backing up his bold words with buckets of goals for AS Monaco – netted ten times in just seven Ligue 1 games
5 votes -
Balbastre - Pieces de Clavecin (1759)
5 votes -
On 8 March, 1910 Raymonde de Laroche became the world's first licensed female pilot
I don't really have any cool articles about de Laroche besides the Wikipedia page on her, but it is quite good and a shortish read, so very worthwhile. There is also this short article from the...
I don't really have any cool articles about de Laroche besides the Wikipedia page on her, but it is quite good and a shortish read, so very worthwhile. There is also this short article from the University of Houston, complete with a 3-minute audio version.
The week of 8 March is also International Women of Aviation Week, celebrating all the female aviators (people are getting away from using gender-specific words like aviatrix that weren't necessary in English anyway), including Jacqueline Cochran, the wartime head of Women Airforce Service Pilots in the U.S. and who would go on to be the first woman to break the sound barrier; Elizabeth "Bessie" Coleman, the first African-American and Native American woman aviator and presumably the first licensed female pilot of mixed race to participate in air races and barnstorming stunt shows across the U.S. and Europe; Leah Hing, the first Chinese-American female pilot and who started her own flight school after the Japanese invasion of Manchuria in 1931; among many other women past and present who are earning their pilot's license.
10 votes -
There was a flawless space mission on Thursday — it wasn’t SpaceX
38 votes -
Armand Duplantis improved his own men's pole vault world record to 6.27m at the All Star Perche event in Clermont-Ferrand, France
14 votes -
Michel Jonasz - En v'la du slow en v'la (1978)
3 votes -
Woodkid - Goliath (2020)
4 votes -
The disturbing tweets blowing up Emilia Pérez’s Oscars campaign
20 votes -
Julie Delpy to receive lifetime honor at Sweden's Gothenburg Film Festival – French multi-hyphenate will be honored with the 2025 Honorary Dragon Award
10 votes -
Thomas Meurot takes us behind the lens of his Sony award-winning photography project Kald Sòl – a raw, black-and-white exploration of cold-water surfing in Iceland
8 votes -
How France uncovered the mystery of the forbidden photos of Nazi-occupied Paris
41 votes -
Coinage and the tyranny of fantasy ‘gold’
19 votes -
Clothing steeped in history and meaning: Inside the 'Shōgun' costumes
11 votes