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If the French had an equivalent of the Japanese
"Living National Treasures," film director Patrice Leconte would surely rank
high on the list. Over a period of three decades, Leconte has helmed over two dozen films
that span a wide range of genres, but always have in common an inquiring intelligence and
a focus on human motivation and behavior. From the erotic comedy-drama, The
Hairdresser's Husband to period dramas such as Ridicule
(a dark satire set in the court of Louis XVI) and The Widow of St. Pierre (about love and the
morality of law in French Canada) or the black-and-white (with countless shades of gray) Girl on the Bridge, a
contemporary love story about a performing knife-thrower and his target, Leconte never
settles for simple answers to complex questions.