Michel Leclerc
Marcia, a classy young Parisian singer, is recording an album with her idol Daredjane, a ’70s rock icon. When Daredjane dies accidentally, Marcia needs to get approval from Daredjane’s rights-holder, Anthony, a suburban market vendor in his thirties, to release their album. But Anthony never liked his distant relative, let alone her music. Their two worlds clash between good and bad taste, sophistication and rudeness, sincerity and lies. Unless love gets in the way…
As everyone knows, children make no difference between social classes, skin colors or religions. But then why does Corentin, Paul and Sofia’s nine-year-old son, only have friends like him at Bagnolet’s school? And when his friends all leave for a private school in Paris, his parents are frightened. From now on, Corentin is the only one in his class. But the only what?
Bahia Benmahmoud, a free-spirited young woman, has a particular way of seeing political engagement, as she doesn’t hesitate to sleep with those who don’t agree with her to convert them to her cause – which is a lot of people, as all right-leaning people are concerned. Generally, it works pretty well. Until the day she meets Arthur Martin, a discreet forty-something who doesn’t like taking risks. She imagines that with a name like that, he’s got to be slightly fascist. But names are deceitful and appearances deceiving.