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Ruth Becquart

News

Ruth Becquart

‘Julie Keeps Quiet’ Review: A Star Athlete Struggles to Keep Her Grip in Belgian Tennis Drama Co-Produced by the Dardenne Brothers
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After the star graduate of an elite Belgian tennis academy commits suicide, her shocking death triggers an investigation into the late teenager’s relationship with the (now suspended) older male coach who’d been so instrumental to her success. That investigation gradually but inevitably comes to focus on the coach’s latest protégé, who’s spent the last several years under his wing, and is on the cusp of qualifying for the Belgian Tennis Federation. People can’t help but suspect that she knows a thing or two about how coach Jeremy (Laurent Caron) treats his pupils when no one else is around to see. Her friends, her parents, the administrators at her school… everyone is eager for her to fill in the blanks, but Julie keeps quiet.

Needless to say, Leonardo Van Dijl’s “Julie Keeps Quiet” doesn’t regard that as much of a spoiler. This impressive debut...
See full article at Indiewire
  • 3/26/2025
  • by David Ehrlich
  • Indiewire
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Official US Trailer for 'Julie Keeps Quiet' Tennis Thriller from Belgium
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"I just need to concentrate on school and tennis." Film Movement has unveiled an official US trailer for an acclaimed indie film titled Julie Keeps Quiet, a Belgian thriller about a star tennis player. This premiered at the 2024 Cannes Film Festival in the Critics Week sidebar, then played at the Karlovy Vary, Melbourne, Vancouver, and Toronto Film Festivals last year. As the star player at an elite tennis academy, Julie's life revolves around the game she loves. When her coach is suddenly suspended following the suicide of one of his female protégées, all the players at the academy are encouraged to speak up about their experiences with him. Julie, however, decides to keep quiet. Executive produced by tennis champion Naomi Osaka, the film is a "tense, taut, artfully hushed debut feature" by Belgian writer-director Leonardo van Dijl. Led by newcomer Tessa Van den Broeck whose key performance "embodies the different ways trauma is internalized,...
See full article at firstshowing.net
  • 2/28/2025
  • by Alex Billington
  • firstshowing.net
‘Julie Keeps Quiet’ Trailer: Naomi Osaka EPs Belgian Tennis Drama About Coach-Player Abuse
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The Belgium submission for the 2025 Oscars blends the sports intensity of “Challengers” with the emotional weight of “She Said.”

The hauntingly titled “Julie Keeps Quiet,” which is screenwriter Leonardo Van Dijl’s directorial debut, was shot on film like fellow tennis drama “Challengers,” but the comparisons end there. Tessa Van den Broeck stars as a top player at an academy who stays silent when her older male coach is suspended amid an investigation.

The official synopsis reads: “As the star player at an elite youth tennis academy, Julie’s life revolves around the game she loves. She trains hard, pausing only for class or physical therapy before returning to the gym fixated on making it into the Belgian Tennis Federation. When her coach Jérémy is suddenly suspended following the suicide of one of his female protégées, all the players at the academy are encouraged to speak up about their experiences with him.
See full article at Indiewire
  • 2/26/2025
  • by Samantha Bergeson
  • Indiewire
‘High Tides’ Season 2 Finally Confirms New Netflix Release Date After Delay
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Picture: Vrt

The Belgian series High Tides (Knokke Off as it’s known in Belgium) is finally returning to Netflix for its second season. First premiering in December 2023, the Dutch drama follows a group of wealthy teens facing the harsh realities of adulthood. It entered the top 10s in 45 countries and spent 3 weeks in the global top 10 charts.

The release date for High Tides season 2 was initially set for January 31st, 2025, although the show ultimately was a no-show on Netflix’s January 2025 schedule list, and no public announcement has come about when it will arrive. However, we’ve now got word that the second season shifted its release by around two months and is now set to touch down on Netflix globally on March 21st. Netflix has already added the new season in the Netherlands, where it’s now spent 3 weeks in their top 10s.

It comes after the series...
See full article at Whats-on-Netflix
  • 2/25/2025
  • by Kasey Moore
  • Whats-on-Netflix
'I’m still enjoying the process of talking about Julie and advocating for her silence' by Amber Wilkinson
Ruth Becquart
Tessa Van den Broeck as Julie. Director Leonardo van Dijl: 'We often see stories, especially about women, where they are always being punished. I did not want this to happen with this story' Photo: Nicolas Karakastanis Julie Keeps Quiet keeps its focus on a young tennis star after her coach is suspended following the suicide of a fellow player. Tessa Van den Broeck - who is herself an up-and-coming player - imbues Julie with a sense of stoicism as she maintains her silence despite the adults around her pushing her to speak out. Director Leonardo van Dijl - who co-wrote the script with Ruth Becquart, says it was important to keep the agency with his central character, even though his choice meant it was tough to get the film made.

“When I started the movie five years ago, the general consensus was, ‘It’s not a movie. She keeps quiet’,” he says.
See full article at eyeforfilm.co.uk
  • 11/15/2024
  • by Amber Wilkinson
  • eyeforfilm.co.uk
Naomi Osaka-Produced Tennis Drama ‘Julie Keeps Quiet,’ Belgium’s Oscar Entry, Gets North American Deal With Film Movement (Exclusive)
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Film Movement has bought North American rights to Belgium Oscar entry “Julie Keeps Quiet” which is executive produced by tennis champion Naomi Osaka, and world premiered at Cannes’ Critics Week.

A feature debut directed by Leonardo Van Dijl, “Julie Keeps Quiet” went on to play Karlovy Vary and Toronto, and will next screen at the BFI London Film Festival following its Cannes bow. The movie will have its U.S. premiere at the Hamptons Film Festival.

The drama stars newcomer Tessa Van den Broeck as Julie, a young and promising tennis player who faces a dilemma when her prominent coach is suspended after the suicide of a former prodigy. Suspicions of inappropriate conduct arise and pressure starts mounting for Julie to speak up. As she refrains from sharing her experiences, her silence leaves the investigation and the coach’s future in limbo.

“Julie Keeps Quiet” is slated for a theatrical...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 10/7/2024
  • by Elsa Keslassy
  • Variety Film + TV
European Film Awards Selection Revealed With ‘Kinds of Kindness,’ ‘Emilia Pérez,’ ‘Sacred Fig,’ ‘The Substance’ Among Titles
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The European Film Academy has revealed the first tranche of film titles that members can consider for nominations for the European Film Awards, which take place on Dec. 7 in Lucerne, Switzerland.

The academy’s selection of 29 titles covers films that had their first official screening between June 1, 2023, and May 31, 2024. Further titles will be announced in September, which will include films that had their premieres in the summer and early autumn festivals, such as Locarno and Venice.

Among the selection are Jacques Audiard’s “Emilia Pérez,” Cannes’ best actress and jury prize winner, Miguel Gomes’ “Grand Tour,” Cannes’ best director winner, Yorgos Lanthimos’ “Kinds Of Kindness,” best actor winner at Cannes, Mohammad Rasoulof’s “The Seed of the Sacred Fig,” jury special prize winner at Cannes, Coralie Fargeat’s “The Substance,” best screenplay winner at Cannes, “Armand” by Halfdan Ullmann Tøndel, the Golden Camera winner at Cannes, Matthias Glasner’s “Dying,...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 8/14/2024
  • by Leo Barraclough
  • Variety Film + TV
‘The Substance’ And ‘The Seed Of The Sacred Fig’ Among First Wave Of 2024 European Film Award Hopefuls
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Cannes Competition titles The Substance, The Seed Of The Sacred Fig, and Emilia Perez are among the first set of titles recommended for nominations at this year’s European Film Awards.

Overall, 29 titles have been selected for the first stage of nominations by the European Film Academy Board. The selection includes films from 26 countries. In the coming weeks, the 5,000 members of the European Film Academy will start to vote on the selected films. The winners will be announced at the European Film Awards ceremony in Lucerne, Switzerland, on December 7.

To be eligible for a European Film Awards, films must be European feature films which, among other criteria, had their first official screening between June 1, 2023 and May 31, 2024 and have a European director. The rule book states that should a film director not be European, exceptions can be made if the filmmaker is “provided they have a European refugee or similar status...
See full article at Deadline Film + TV
  • 8/14/2024
  • by Zac Ntim
  • Deadline Film + TV
‘Julie Keeps Quiet’ Review: A Tight, Poised Belgian Debut About the Challenges of Holding It Together
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For teenage tennis prodigy Julie, discipline isn’t merely a virtue but a survival strategy. Repressing adolescent urges and emotional swings has long been part of her routine at the high-level youth tennis academy where she’s currently the star student: Years of concentrating all her time and attention on her game — all work and all play, as it were — look likely to reward her with the pro career she dreams of. Yet as whispers build of inappropriate behavior by her coach, Julie’s deliberate tunnel vision seems less a rigorous regimen than a fragile defense against interior collapse. A tense, taut, artfully hushed debut feature by Belgian writer-director Leonardo van Dijl, “Julie Keeps Quiet” also knows the value of control — though its own calm is fraught with anxiety and anger.

A standout of this year’s Critics’ Week programme at Cannes — where it won the Sacd Award and scored sales including a U.
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 6/12/2024
  • by Guy Lodge
  • Variety Film + TV
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‘Julie Keeps Quiet’ Review: Riveting Debut From Belgium Exposes the Ruptured Relationship Between a Teenage Tennis Star and Her Coach
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Belgian director Leonardo Van Dijl’s assured debut feature, Julie Keeps Quiet, builds a riveting psychological drama around the choice of a star player from an elite youth tennis academy not to speak up in the wake of tragedy. In her first acting role, young tennis ace Tessa Van den Broeck internalizes the title character’s brooding unease with slow-burn intensity. The movie’s silence is so loaded with the anxiety, obstinance, inchoate anger and desire for anonymity of the traumatized teenage sportswoman that the constant thwack of her racquet hitting the ball cuts through the tension like violent shocks.

Unfolding predominantly in static frames that keep the story laser-focused, with pinpoint use of American contemporary classical composer Caroline Shaw’s needling vocal score, this is an austerely effective work. It has a kinship with Laura Wandel’s Playground from 2021 and last year’s The Teachers’ Lounge by İlker Çatak,...
See full article at The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
  • 5/22/2024
  • by David Rooney
  • The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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‘Simon Of The Mountain’ wins top Cannes Critics’ Week prize
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Federico Luis’ Simon Of The Mountain won the Cannes Critics’ Week Grand Prize on Wednesday night (May 22).

The Argentinian first feature is a coming-of-age story about a boy with a disability wrestling through life. Luxbox is handling international sales for the film produced by Argentina’s 20/20 in coproduction with Chile’s Planta, Uruguay’s Mother Superior and Los Angeles and Mexico City-based Twelve Thirty Media.

The jury prize went to US director Constance Tsang’s first feature Blue Sun Palace about Chinese immigrants living in Queens. Charades is handling international sales and WME has North American rights to the film...
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 5/22/2024
  • ScreenDaily
‘Simon of the Mountain’ Nabs Cannes Critics’ Week Grand Prize
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And the winner is: “Simon of the Mountain.”

The film, directed by Federico Luis – and marking his feature debut – was awarded Cannes’ Critics Week Grand Prix.

Sold by Luxbox, the Argentina-Chile-Uruguay production stars Lorenzo “Toto” Ferro, the lead in breakout “El Angel,” as Simon, 21, a lonely only son who falls in with a group of discapacitated kids, feigning a discapacity. Thanks to their friendship he flowers, discovering love, sex and a sense of belonging.

“I am thinking not only about what it means to us, but also about what it means to the people in Argentina who, over the course of the next four years, will struggle, trying to make local films,” said Luis, accepting the award.

“At home, there are people who still think we make films no one wants to see. I hope this will change it and that Argentinian people – and then the whole world – will watch Argentinian cinema.
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 5/22/2024
  • by Marta Balaga
  • Variety Film + TV
Julie Keeps Quiet - Amber Wilkinson - 19079
Ruth Becquart
Watching this calmly controlled and sharply focused debut feature from Leonardo ban Dijl put me in mind of Vania Turner’s recent Greek/British documentary Tack, which charts the story of sailing champion Sofia Bekatorou. She spoke out years after she had been abused by a coach, prompting a second, younger woman to come forward with her own separate experience and sparking the Greek arm of the #MeToo movement.

Questions of why a survivor would stay silent were among those raised as the court case for the younger woman went forward. Van Dijl’s film - co-written with Ruth Becquart - goes a long way to answering some of those, while asking plenty of its own. Belgian Julie has the sort of focus many young athletes have, laying her energies down on the court on a daily basis - something Van Dijl emphasises...
See full article at eyeforfilm.co.uk
  • 5/20/2024
  • by Amber Wilkinson
  • eyeforfilm.co.uk
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Cannes Critics’ Week title ‘Julie Keeps Quiet’ scores French distribution deal (exclusive)
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Jour2Fete has acquired French distribution rights to Cannes Critics’ Week title Julie Keeps Quiet.

The debut feature of Belgian director Leonardo Van Dijl, Julie Keeps Quiet is set in an elite tennis academy. When an investigation into her tennis coach ignites and he is suspended, all of the club’s players are encouraged to speak up but star player Julie chooses to keep quiet - leaving the investigation and the coach’s future in doubt. Van Dijl’s short film Stephanie played in Cannes, San Sebastian and TIFF in 2020 and was set in the world of gymnastics.

International sales for...
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 4/18/2024
  • ScreenDaily
New Europe Film Sales Boards ‘Julie Keeps Quiet’ by Leonardo Van Dijl (Exclusive)
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Warsaw-based sales outlet New Europe Film Sales has signed an international sales deal for the upcoming Belgian debut “Julie Keeps Quiet” by Leonardo Van Dijl, whose short film “Stephanie,” also repped by New Europe, played in Cannes competition in 2020.

Both films are set in the world of competitive youth sports: the short explored the world of gymnastics, while the feature film takes on tennis. The feature is to be shot in the second half of this year with delivery planned for mid-2024.

In “Julie Keeps Quiet,” when the practices of a prominent tennis coach are investigated, attention quickly shifts to Julie, a young and promising player who is always around him. As pressure mounts for her to share her experiences, Julie chooses to keep quiet and focus on her game, leaving the investigation and the coach’s future in doubt.

Van Dijl said: “In a society where speaking up is highly valued,...
See full article at Variety Film + TV
  • 5/19/2023
  • by Leo Barraclough
  • Variety Film + TV
Aneurin Barnard, Dar Zuzovsky join cast of Casanova drama ‘A Beautiful Imperfection’ (exclusive)
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The English-language Dutch film is now shooting in Italy and the Netherlands.

UK actor Aneurin Barnard, whose credits include TV series Peaky Blinders and Dunkirk, and Israel’s Dar Zuzovsky have joined the cast of Dutch director Michiel Van Erp’s costume drama A Beautiful Imperfection, about Casanova and the woman with whom he falls in love.

Barnard is set to play Casanova’s brother Barrnard while Zuzovsky has been cast as Maria, the woman with whom Giacomo Casanova (the more famous of the Casanova brothers) is played by Jonah Hauer-King.

The film is based on the novel In Lucia...
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 6/9/2022
  • by Geoffrey Macnab
  • ScreenDaily
Aneurin Barnard, Dar Zuzovsky to star in Casanova drama ‘A Beautiful Imperfection’ (exclusive)
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The English-language Dutch film is now shooting in Italy and the Netherlands.

UK actor Aneurin Barnard, whose credits include TV series Peaky Blinders and Joe Wright’s Dunkirk, and Israel’s Dar Zuzovsky have signed to star in Dutch director Michiel Van Erp’s costume drama A Beautiful Imperfection, about Casanova and the woman with whom he falls in love.

The film is based on the novel In Lucia’s Eyes by Arthur Japin and tells the story of the love affair between Casanova and a courtesan who becomes disfigured by smallpox and flees Italy for Amsterdam.

The €5.5 million English-language...
See full article at ScreenDaily
  • 6/9/2022
  • by Geoffrey Macnab
  • ScreenDaily
Anneke Sluiters at an event for Tulipani: Liefde, eer en een fiets (2017)
Hotel Poseidon review – soggy zombified hell in a Belgian hotel encrusted with grot
Anneke Sluiters at an event for Tulipani: Liefde, eer en een fiets (2017)
Admirably uncompromising depiction of what may or may not be its hero’s subconscious is intensely realised but not all that much fun to watch

By turns fetid and febrile, pyretic and putrid, and all things hot and sticky, this unique avant garde work is the result of a collaboration between writer-director Stefan Lernous and his colleagues at Abattoir Fermé, a theatre company based in the Belgian Flemish-speaking city of Mechelen. It has a plot, of sorts: there’s a guy named Dave who looks after his family’s supposedly empty hotel, an elaborate set full of rooms encrusted with mould, grot and dead stuff, all of it in the process of mulching down into one sludgy, semi-organic mass. Perhaps the title is a clue that this is all taking place in some para-aquatic terrain, which would explain the abundance of tridents and fishtanks and other watery kit.

Anyway, Dave...
See full article at The Guardian - Film News
  • 12/28/2021
  • by Leslie Felperin
  • The Guardian - Film News
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Fantasia 2021: ‘Hotel Poseidon’ Review
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Stars: Ruth Becquart, Steve Geerts, Anneke Sluiters, Tine Van den Wyngaert, Dominique Van Malder, Tom Vermeir | Written and Directed by Stef Lernous

Sometimes, just sometimes, you come across a film that defies categorisation; some that defy logic. Then there’s Hotel Poseidon. Which defies categorisation, logic, explanation… you name it. This film is Literally someones twisted fever dream – a series of vignettes told in one locale from the point of view of one person but featuring a bizarre, absurdist and downright disturbing cast of characters And situations – writ large on the screen. And whomever this dream belongs to has some serious issues!

The films “plot” – if you can say this film has a plot – tells the story of Dave, the reluctant manager of a hotel where fungus covers the walls and comments such as “faded glory” and “has seen better times” completely fall short to describe this establishment. He wanders...
See full article at Nerdly
  • 8/27/2021
  • by Phil Wheat
  • Nerdly
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