Take all those cheesy Japanese TV series featuring crash helmets, coloured tights and rubber monsters. Move them to France, into the hands of enthusiastic amateurs and you get France Five, defending the Eiffel tower and camembert from the forces of evil.
Take all those cheesy Japanese TV series featuring crash helmets, coloured tights and rubber monsters. Move them to France, into the hands of enthusiastic amateurs and you get France Five, defending the Eiffel tower and camembert from the forces of evil.
Vintage French TV report on raves from 1994, with some hilarious quotes and comments in there.
Photographs of mobile dance halls (click “les bals”) that move around remote villages in the east of France. They have a particular aesthetic of their own.
Europe got a taste of rolling blackouts yesterday. They were due to increased demand on the grid when temperatures suddenly dropped. update : it actually started with a line being turned off in order to let a cruise ship past.
French guerilla promotion for the film Fast Food Nation. The text translates as: Help yourself! You don’t usually ask yourself so many questions.
Wonderful and hypnotic: using recurring elements of French urban life as the focus for [animated photo sequences][1].
[1]: http://www.milieu-urbain.com/ (Milieu(x) Urbain(s) [site language: French])
La cabane perchée. French tree-house builders.
Turning France’s Mont St-Michel into a giant sundial.
Musicotherapie, a short film by 3 French animation students. Pretty out there…
Countryside or small town discotheques in France have a particular aesthetic. Photographer Eric Tabuchi has captured many of them. His sites features many other series in the same vein like Chinese restaurants and abandoned fuel stations.