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Director: Lucky McKee
Short film by Lucky McKee
Critical Reception & Ratings
Boilly is a short film directed by Lucky McKee. While the film's critical reception has not been widely covered, its status as a work by the acclaimed director suggests it may be of interest to McKee's fans and cinephiles. Details about the film's public reception or awards recognition are currently unavailable.
Why you might like this:
Boilly, the short film directed by Lucky McKee, offers a visually striking and emotionally charged cinematic experience. McKee's distinct directorial style shines through, blending elements of drama and suspense to create a thought-provoking narrative that will captivate fans of his unique filmmaking approach.
Louis-Léopold Boilly was a French painter and draftsman. A creator of popular portrait paintings, he also produced a vast number of genre paintings documenting French middle-class social life. His life and work spanned the eras of monarchical France, the French Revolution, the Napoleonic Empire, the Bourbon Restoration and the July Monarchy. His 1800 painting Un Trompe-l'œil introduced the term trompe-l'œil, applied to the technique that uses realistic imagery to create the optical illusion that the depicted objects exist in three dimensions, though the "unnamed" technique itself had existed in Greek and Roman times.
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