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Emmanuel Bourdieu, Poison Friends
Hosted by
Stephen Schaefer
Originally aired on
Monday, October 30th, 2006
How many philosophy professors become filmmakers? In France, at least one. Emmanuel Bourdieu, the son of a famous French sociologist, has pretty much given up his Sorbonne day job to make movies - with a philosophical twist. His new Poison Friends, which screened at the New York Film Festival, takes a cue from Les Liaisons Dangereuses, only instead of focusing on the sexual hijinks and jealousies of upper-crust 18th-century aristocrats, Bourdieu's Cannes winner (Critics' Week Grand Prize) considers literature students as they exit college for life's realities - and deceptions. Bourdieu began as a screenwriter (Esther Kahn, Place Vendôme) before helming the 2001 prize-winning short, Candidature.









