A PRIVATE LIFE
103 minutes; R; directed by Rebecca Zlotowski
Critic’s Grade: B+

When in France, do as the French do.
You know, smoke cigarettes in the rain, use psychobabble as a defense mechanism to push away your adult son (Vincent Lacoste), act as if you’re too busy and/or sophisticated to cuddle your grandson, live in an impossibly large, well-appointed apartment lined with books and limned with gleaming wood surfaces, hook up with your ex-husband (Daniel Auteil) and have a psychedelic past-life experience with the help of your wacky hypnotherapist (sans drugs). We all go a little mad sometimes.
Don’t forget to imbibe heaping helpings of good wine. For good measure, visit the gorgeous, majestic Bibliothèque Mazarine, the oldest library in France; it opened in 1643.
Speaking French approximately 98% of the movie (but cursing in English), the ever-reliable Jodie Foster nails the role of an American-born therapist who’s reeling from the apparent suicide of a patient.
She and said ex proceed to go all Miss Marple/Hercule Poirot on us, inserting themselves into precarious situations while attempting to solve the whodunit, which is really an if-she-did-it, how’d-she-do-it and why’d-she-do-it.
Foster being Foster, a screen actress since her debut at age 5 on television’s “Mayberry R.F.D.” and a double Oscar winner who was first nominated for 1976’s “Taxi Driver,” she easily brings viewers along on her Paris murder (maybe) mystery.
The camera still loves Foster after all these years, and she still knows how to use that dynamic to her advantage.
Bonus: A cameo by legendary documentary filmmaker Frederick Wiseman, now 96. Plus the maybe ironic, maybe misdirection-coded presence of Talking Heads hit “Psycho Killer” on the soundtrack. Twice. Nice.
**********
DRACULA
130 minutes; R; directed by Luc Besson
Critic’s grade: B-
A centuries-long pain in the heart, and pains in necks, too. Newfangled Drac tale + old-fashioned eternal love. Vampire-created perfume: WTF? Powdered wigs galore in a goofy ballroom dance sequence that wouldn’t be out of place in a Broadway musical, on TikTok or at one of those weddings where they make the brides and groomsmen put on a show.

All that, digitally created living gargoyles like Oz’s flying monkeys and Christoph Waltz as a bloodsucker-hunting rogue priest, too. Fangs for the memories!
“Dracula” gets a bonus half letter grade for the weirdness factor.
Copyright 2026 by Philip Booth. All rights reserved.
Follow me at Philip’s Flicks on Letterboxd.


That’s what’s on offer with the
Just in time to celebrate the 50th anniversary of La Nouvelle Vague, the French New Wave, here comes Cinemoi, a UK television network that offers all French films, all the time.