Hélène Cattet and Bruno Forzani, the filmmaking duo behind The Strange Color of Your Body’s Tears, and Let the Corpses Tan, are back with a unique spin on the Eurospy subgenre with Reflection in a Dead Diamond. Below we can exclusively unveil Reflection in a Dead Diamond’s French poster by Gilles Vranckx ahead of the film’s premiere this […]
Hélène Cattet and Bruno Forzani, the filmmaking duo behind The Strange Color of Your Body’s Tears, and Let the Corpses Tan, are back with a unique spin on the Eurospy subgenre with Reflection in a Dead Diamond.
Below we can exclusively unveil Reflection in a Dead Diamond’s French poster by Gilles Vranckx ahead of the film’s premiere this weekend at the Berlin International Film Festival.
UPDATE: Shudder has acquired the film for premiere later this year.
In the film, “John D, a septuagenarian living in a luxury hotel on the Côte d’Azur, is intrigued by his next-door neighbour who reminds him of the wildest years on the Riviera during the 1960s. At that time, he was a spy in a rapidly developing world full of promise. One day, this neighbour mysteriously disappears… bringing John face to face with his demons: are his former adversaries back to wreak havoc on his idyllic world?”
While an homage to ’60s European spy thrillers may not seem like genre-worthy news, never expect a straightforward approach with Cattet and Forzani at the helm. That’s also reflected in the Reflection in a Dead Diamond