Thursday, April 12, 2018 (2)

Apr 12, 2018
March 22, 2018
Thursday
  • BACK TO BURGUNDY

  • Mar 22, 2018 to Apr 27, 2018
  • Location: Angelika Film Center
  • Description:

    Music Box Films is proud to announce the US release of BACK TO BURGUNDY by French writer-director Cédric Klapisch (L'Auberge Espagnole, Russian Dolls, Chinese Puzzle,) the tale of three thirty-something siblings reunited in the family vineyard where they grew up. Starring three of France’s most popular young actors, BACK TO BURGUNDY is scheduled to open in New York (Village East) and San Francisco (Vogue Theater) on Friday, March 23 followed by a national roll out.

    Jean (Pio Marmai,) left his native Burgundy and the family wine business a decade ago to travel around the world. The black sheep of the family, he unexpectedly returns home to reconnect with his ailing father. When Jean’s father dies, his sister Juliette (Ana Girardot,) takes over the reins of the “domaine” together with their younger brother, Jérémie (François Civil), who has recently married into one of the region’s more prestigious wine families. As the business is transferred to the children, a prohibitive inheritance ta

  • Created by: Aimee Morris
April 12, 2018
Thursday
  • Assisted Reproductive Technologies – Cultural and Ethical Values from a Comparative Perspective

  • Apr 12, 2018 at 6:00am to Apr 13, 2018 at 2:00pm
  • Location: La Maison Française of NYU
  • Description:

    Assisted Reproductive Technologies (ART) – Cultural, Religious, Ethical Values and Norms From a Comparative Perspective, France/United States

    This two-day Franco-American workshop seeks to compare the cultural, ethical, religious, historical and policy implications of how reproductive technologies have developed and now impact our two national contexts. In both countries, advanced reproductive technologies have long been in development and are now in widespread use. France and the United States share a certain number of similar conceptions relative to kinship and gender, and are both undergoing comparable evolutions in the creation of new family configurations. Yet in France, public discourse calling for “social solidarity” with people experiencing infertility is widespread and public payment and access is designed and tightly controlled through biomedical regulation. In the US, by contrast, “privacy” of family life and “consumer choice” dominate the public discussion, while few insuran

  • Created by: La Maison Française of NYU