![]() So no matter what the occasion might be, you can check Edouard Philipponnat's availability so he can set the stage as well as your hearts in a state of trance. Now come on, we cannot help but be star struck with his exceptional acting skills, charm and persona, so if you’re looking for someone who can add the unforgettable feel to your wedding or event, product launch, it has got to be him. Since we feature a wide range of different artists from all around the world, you can rely on us to help you get to know how to book Edouard Philipponnat for a concert wedding or a show. The skill and the talent that Edouard Philipponnat brings to the table is something that is evident as we see him rising up as the most popular artists amongst all age groups and especially youth. After all, unless you’re living under a rock, we’re sure you might have vibed with his amazing confident and captivating personality and top notch acting skills. Through PartyMap you can instant contact Edouard Philipponnat's manager or booking agent and get Edouard Philipponnat price, rate, number & email address. The Runner is available on digital platforms on 18 November.One of the reasons why we at PartyMap pride ourselves on being the best in business is because we make the process of getting your favourite artists booked completely seamless. ![]() And the nervy Philipponnat impresses, crawling out of his own stupor into the bracing air of self-confrontation. ![]() Danner’s background as an acting coach shows, with Douglas offering a terse worldliness more reminiscent of Matt Dillon than his own acting clan. Still, rooted thoroughly in its protagonist’s introspection, The Runner makes up for what it lacks in thriller pacing with an ambitious depth of fraughtness. Sad, lank-haired Aiden driving away from a car park rendezvous with Wall alternates with blissful Aiden idling under a tree with Layla. When it comes to excavating what is under this pristine surface, director Michelle Danner leans on a heavy-handed flashback structure that is over-eager to answer questions about Aiden as soon as they come up, rather than harbouring them for extra tension. “It’s just amazing – you feel bulletproof,” he replies, ODing on boredom. “What’s it like, having so much?” asks Aiden’s girlfriend (Jessica Amlee). This vale of elegantly wasted youth and cynical law enforcement has a jaded Bret Easton Ellis air lingering around it. But Aiden starts to disintegrate under the stress, compulsively reminiscing back to his own Ophelia, doomed first love Layla (Kerri Medders). Aiden steers his partner Blake (Nadji Jeter) into inviting the kingpin (Eric Balfour) to the epic party he’s throwing at his mother’s high-spec townhouse, where he has to wear a wire. Gilded high-schooler Aiden (Philipponnat) is busted by the no-nonsense Detective Wall (Douglas), who releases him on the proviso he helps take down a local big-shot dealer. It plays a bit like Hamlet, if Hamlet was constantly bumping coke and hawking every substance going around. But, befitting his newly sober and reformed status, Douglas takes the paternal cop role in The Runner, while French-Finnish actor Edouard Philipponnat (soon to be seen in Ridley Scott’s Napoleon) is a teenage drug-dealing screwup both give robust performances in this deeply felt but somewhat cumbersome thriller. A high-society princeling trying to drown inner demons with drugs by the bucketload: it could have been a role written specifically for Cameron Douglas, son of Michael.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |