The film follows the Traoré siblings as they confront grief, past crimes, and divergent ambitions, trying to decide if they can truly escape the cycles of violence and pressure that have shaped their lives. I went into Street Flow 3 expecting a deep and emotional final chapter, and in many ways, that's exactly what it delivers. The film returns to the Traoré siblings—Demba, Soulaymaan, and Noumouké—whose lives have always been marked by difficult choices between loyalty, survival, and ambition. This third installment is structured as a reckoning. Directors: Kery James, Leïla Sy Writer: Kery James Stars: Enzo Bour, Jammeh Diangana, Bakary Diombera Directing duo Kery James and Leïla Sy continue to treat the world of the Parisian banlieues with seriousness and empathy. The neighborhoods feel inhabited. The streets, apartment blocks, and cramped interiors convey a sense of social context rather than simply functioning as backdrops. I appreciate how the film refuses to glorify crime or...
For centuries, women have been objects of desire, and men have been the ones who have desired them. While female lust has been a growing phenomenon (because apparently it's the only way men understand it) in the media, in recent years we've seen a dozen movies and TV shows about older women and younger men. Whether you consider this natural or pedophilic is a matter of debate, but you may have noticed this new trend. It seems that Julia May Jonas's Vladimir is a novel that emerged at the heart of this trend in 2022. Although I haven't read the book, I can imagine the fascination it generated, and I also understand why a Netflix series was created so soon after its release. These days, the turnover is so fast that sometimes the book isn't even finished before it hits our screens. The appeal of Vladimir doesn't lie in its depiction of a woman in her fifties who decides to pursue a man nearing thirty; in fact, it's her appeal that makes her so interesting. Cre...