![]() ![]() ![]() It is set in Paris in 1968, when the French New Wave filmmakers like Godard and Truffaut were changing the art of moviemaking, and when a Parisian student riot was about to erupt because, of all things, the director of the Cinematheque Francais had been fired. I wrote just a week ago that the Vietnam documentary “The Fog of War” cannot possibly mean as much to a Gen-Xer (or -Yer, or anyone younger) as it would to a Baby Boomer, and the same holds true of “The Dreamers.” It’s a bit of a history lesson for folks younger than, say, 40. ![]() Two of Bernardo Bertolucci’s great loves - sex and movies - are celebrated, analyzed, partaken of and discussed in “The Dreamers,” a film that, despite its potentially volatile subject matter, is innocuous and good-natured. ![]()
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