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  1. Título original: Les naufragés de l'île de la Tortue. Sinopsis: Un agente de viajes crea la operación "Robinson Crusoe". Va a las Antillas con el fin de acoger a las primeras llegadas. Pero el viaje se convierte en un verdadero fiasco….

  2. Three young women from Paris seek refuge from their concerns as they embark on a summer escapade by the seaside. A cozy cottage, an expansive empty beach, and in the midst of it all, Joëlle, Karine, and Caroline, brimming with boundless enthusiasm and vitality.

  3. 30 de oct. de 1996 · Near Orouet: Directed by Jacques Rozier. With Caroline Cartier, Danièle Croisy, Françoise Guégan, Patrick Verde. A patient observation on the adventures a group of three young girls spending their three-week summer vacation at a small village, a quotidian that includes cooking, excursions, playing cards and going out with guys ...

  4. Kareen, Caroline and Joëlle rent a small house by the sea on a deserted beach and spend their days revelling in their newfound freedom. Just as the holiday starts to become monotonous, Joëlle's boss and unwelcome admirer Gilbert shows up unexpectedly.

  5. Near Orouet. Du côté d'Orouët. Jacques Rozier, France, 1973. Comment. No fictional stake in this scene of a walk along the beach, the filmmaker seems to enjoy using the screen as a canvas on which his puts his characters silhouettes. He chooses rather wide shots to be able to gather the heavy sky, reflecting on the strand and into the sea.

  6. Jacques Rozier’s Du Cote D'Orouet is a superb little-known French gem from the ‘70s that anybody who has the slightest interest in New Wave cinema should see. It exhibits the trappings of an Eric Rohmer picture with its bucolic setting and marvelous color composition, but without the philosophical verbiage that peppers the scripts of these ...

  7. The film follows three young women who shack up in a family beach house in the last days of summer. They’re eventually joined by two men: a Byronic sailor, and an uptight itinerant hiker. This ebb and flow of relationships and affections more or less is the entire narrative mellowly spanning the two and a half hours of “Orouët.”