French director and screenwriter born in Paris in the mid-90s, her strength lies in her ability to capture with deep sensitivity and authenticity the awkwardness of some interactions. The subtlety of a glance, the decay of a smile, while keeping a strong and personal artistic direction. This approach is the new mirror of comedy. Human, sensitive, far from a stereotype and full of asperities.
Capturing raw emotions led Rosalie to narrate meaningful short films and collaborate with French and international artists.
Linda
Celebrating the strength and resilience of women—those we aim to embody, those we aspire to become, and those we once were.
Gloria Steinem’s text was the first inspiration for this film.
And Linda is my mother’s first name.
I wanted to honor both.
For all the other women.
The ones we try to be, the ones we’d like to become, the ones we’ve been.
Through a rearview mirror, with an old camcorder, from a balcony, at a café table: the Lindas of yesterday observe the one of today. Wearing a suffocating cat costume, the young woman strives to attract potential future customers to a new amusement park. While her employer urges her to keep quiet and not make waves, the words of Gloria Steinem resonate. On the streets of Paris, Linda takes her steps, frees her voice. And off she goes.