
Culture in France- the best of 2019
Literary events
In January, Michel Houllebec, the bad boy of French literature, released his new novel Serotonin.
France’s top literary prize, the Goncourt, went to Jean-Paul Dubois for his book All Men do not Inhabit the World in the Same Way.
In January, The Grand Prix at the International Comics Festival at Angouleme, southern France, went to famous Japanese manga author Rumiko Takahashi.
The year in Cinema
In January, the Césars, the equivalent of the French Oscars, were topped by the film Custody, a French drama directed by Xavier Legrand.
In May, the Cannes Film Festival's jury was presided by Mexican filmmaker Alejandro Gonzales Inarritu.
The Golden Palm in 2019 went to Korean filmmaker Bong Joon Hoo for his scathing social satire Parasite.
Art and exhibitions
Tutankhamen, treasures of the Golden Pharoah became the most visited exhibition in France with nearly 1 and a half million visitors.
The biggest ever exhibition of legendary Italian maestro Leonardo Da Vinci opened at the Louvre.
Listen to this and much more on our podcast by clicking 'Play' above.
(Thanks to radio technicians Yann Bourdelas and Guillaume Buffet)
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