Cotillard is the anchor of "From The Land of the Moon," directed by Nicole Garcia from a script that Garcia, Jacques Fieschi, and Natalie Carter adapted from a novel by Milena Agus. The movie is sumptuously shot by Christophe Beaucarne; every frame is robustly picturesque. If your review contains spoilers, please check the Spoiler box.

Instead, it just moons about love so lost that it may never have existed at all. The mistakes of From the Land of the Moon are wide-ranging, but they all start with a character who's not worth our time. The percentage of Approved Tomatometer Critics who have given this movie a positive review.

From the Land of the Moon

American Honey review: Andrea Arnold mislays map on sweet, indelible roadtrip. A veteran of the war in Indochina, he's picked up a kidney infection that manifests itself in bouts of exhausted sighing. His treatment is gob-fulls of opium and the odd manly grunt to help through the pain. Jessica Kiang reviews Nicole Garcia's adaptation of the novel by. A film prone to cutting on an unfallen tear, "From the Land of the Moon" from French director Nicole Garcia is as syrupy a confection as ever dripped from the pen of Nicholas Sparks (though inspired by the novel "Mal di. The film is adapted from an Italian novel by Milena Agus.

Trailer From the Land of the Moon

From the Land of the Moon

From the Land of the Moon

Buy movie tickets in advance, find movie times, watch trailers, read movie reviews, and more at Fandango. Enter your location to see which movie theaters are playing From the Land of the Moon near you. The vapid melodrama of Nicole Garcia's From the Land of the Moon suggests an accidental parody of the beautiful suffering that's often infused the work of its star, Marion Cotillard.

Conspiracy Theory: Did We Land on the Moon? (original title). * Detailed comparison of the backgrounds claimed to be identical in fact show significant changes in the relative positions of the hills that are consistent with the claimed locations that the images were taken from. Starring: Marion Cotillard, Louis Garrel, Álex Brendemühl. Gabrielle (Cotillard) comes from a small village in the South of France at a a time when her dream of true love is considered scandalous, and even a sign of insanity. Review Interpretation of the news based on evidence, including data, as well as A sampling of recent movies that received one star or less from Washington Post film critics.