The Hollywood Reporter by Frank Scheck
For all the impressive ease with which the filmmaker handles her tyke star, Nana never quite manages to achieve the thematic resonance to which it aspires.
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France · 2011
1h 8m
Director Valérie Massadian
Starring Kelyna Lecomte, Marie Delmas, Alain Sabras
Genre Drama
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4-year-old Nana's solitary existence in a rural French town is defined by three instances of death. Back from school on a late afternoon, all she finds is silence in the house.
The Hollywood Reporter by Frank Scheck
For all the impressive ease with which the filmmaker handles her tyke star, Nana never quite manages to achieve the thematic resonance to which it aspires.
The New York Times by Jeannette Catsoulis
Naturalistic and mysterious, Nana is terrifyingly dependent on its diminutive star. Insisting on neither written lines nor predetermined actions (the film's short script was used primarily to obtain financing), Ms. Massadian, who worked with the child for almost two years, has coaxed a performance of remarkable lucidity.
Slant Magazine by Joseph Jon Lanthier
Its meta-cinematic "think piece"-ness is redeemed by the slinky symmetries drawn between Massadian's own auteur-ship and the protagonist's narrative role.
Barely over an hour, the sketch feels lovely, unhurried and a bit insignificant. That may be your definition of cinema, but if you've hired a babysitter, this isn't the film for your date night.
Village Voice by Melissa Anderson
A fiction film that documents the unpredictable, unscripted actions of its pint-size lead, Nana offers new ways of thinking about childhood, or, at the very least, about children in movies.