Tuesday, January 13, 2026

Menton: Eden Cinema Reinvents Itself for a Cultural 2026

 

Despite a change in management at the beginning of 2025, Menton’s only cinema, L’Eden, has not missed a beat. Quite the opposite: the three-screen venue continues to broaden its horizons, offering an increasingly eclectic program designed to reflect the tastes and curiosity of its diverse local audience. And if 2025 was a year of adjustment, the outlook for 2026 is shaping up to be distinctly optimistic.

“We ended the year on a strong note with Avatar 3 and The Housekeeper, which were the pleasant surprises of the Christmas holidays,” explains Jean-Marie Charvet, owner of the cinema. He does, however, acknowledge a broader national trend: “Attendance was down about 20% over the year—63,000 admissions in 2025 compared to 80,000 in 2024—which is the case for most cinemas across France.”

Charvet is clear-eyed about the reasons. “Alongside commercial releases, we were missing at least two major crowd-pullers like Un p’tit truc en plus or Le Comte de Monte-Cristo, which came out in 2024. To make a year really work, you need those anchor films.” For a local cinema, the response is adaptation—and renewal.

A Cultural Kick-Off to 2026

The year begins on a decidedly cultural note. From February onward, L’Eden will host a series of events blending cinema, music, and intellectual discovery.

The highlight for film lovers is a film-concert dedicated to Georges Brassens, scheduled for Sunday, February 8 at 6:30 p.m. The evening opens with a live performance by Nicolas Paugam, whose show “Nicolas Paugam tropicalizes Brassens” reimagines the songs of the legendary singer-songwriter, who died in 1981.

In the second half, director Sandrine Dumarais will present a screening of her film The Gaze of Georges Brassens. Built largely from intimate and moving personal testimonies, the film reveals a lesser-known side of Brassens. Long before fame, he had taken up a camera, filming moments of his life—sometimes in color, sometimes in black and white—and, above all, the people he loved. The result is a rare, human portrait of an iconic artist. (€15 for the full evening.)

Another early highlight comes just days later: the first conference of 2026, on Thursday, February 12 at 3 p.m., devoted to art history. Led by Françoise Tayar, professor of art history and art photographer, the lecture will offer an in-depth reading of a series of paintings, accompanied by projected works.

Reviving the Spirit of Art-House Cinema


Beyond individual events, L’Eden has a larger ambition: to reclaim its place as a true Art et Essai cinema. “As we did years ago, we want to revive the ciné-club spirit and work toward obtaining the Art and Experimental Cinema classification,” Charvet explains. His other cinemas in Fréjus (Le Lido) and Saint-Raphaël (Le Vox) already hold this label.

The classification is demanding. It requires cinemas to screen so-called “unique” films—works of undeniable artistic quality that have yet to find the audience they deserve. In return, the label brings recognition and access to subsidies from the Ministry of Culture. “We’ll be working with the Var-based association Artem 83 to develop the artistic and cultural side of the Eden in Menton,” Charvet adds.

A Local Cinema, First and Foremost


Plans for 2026 also include live theater performances for young audiences starting with the February school holidays, as well as one-man shows for adults. Under the direction of Nathalie Poulet, the Menton cinema will roll out these initiatives during the first quarter of the year, while continuing regular collaborations with local partners such as Amnesty International, Sciences Po, and other community organizations.

While the broader film industry looks promising for 2026, Charvet remains firmly focused on what makes L’Eden unique. Big-budget films may draw crowds to multiplexes elsewhere on the Riviera, but Menton’s cinema thrives on proximity, loyalty, and cultural curiosity—especially among its subscribers.

Discussions about the cinema’s future have already taken place at Menton’s town hall, though past projects were shelved as “too expensive” or “too complicated.” Perhaps, in keeping with the spirit of the City of Lemons, a more human-scale vision of cinema is exactly what works best.

One thing is certain: as municipal elections approach next March, the future of L’Eden—and culture in Menton more broadly—deserves a central place in the conversation.

Sunday, January 11, 2026

New Year, Same Pride: A Queer Celebration in Nice

 

The LGBTQIA+ Côte d’Azur Center is kicking off 2026 with an open, joyful gathering that brings the community together in the heart of Nice.

On Sunday, January 18, 2026, at 3:00 p.m., the Center will host its New Year’s Greetings at its space on rue Cathy Richeux (formerly 123 rue de Roquebillière). Open to everyone and free of charge, the afternoon is designed as a warm, inclusive moment to celebrate the year ahead.

Guests can expect a relaxed and festive atmosphere featuring a queer galette, welcoming speeches, music, and an exhibition—an invitation to connect, reflect, and share in collective optimism for the months to come. As always, the Center emphasizes openness, diversity, and community, making the event accessible to longtime supporters and newcomers alike.

The visual for the event was created with the support of Patrick Moya, whose contribution adds a vibrant artistic touch to the celebration.

Whether you’re part of the LGBTQIA+ community, an ally, or simply curious to discover the Center and its work, this New Year’s gathering offers a perfect opportunity to start 2026 together—locally, proudly, and in good company.

Saturday, January 10, 2026

Rosé and Riviera Secrets: The White Lotus Invades France

 

France is officially inheriting The White Lotus crown—and this time, the decadence comes with rosé, Riviera sunburns, perhaps some scandal and Parisian side-eyes.

Season 4 of Mike White’s cultural phenomenon is heading to France, with the epicenter of the drama set at the jaw-dropping Château de La Messardière in Saint-Tropez. If the show thrives on obscene luxury masking emotional rot, this location is almost too perfect.

The former 19th-century palace—now a five-star hotel perched above the bay—boasts 86 rooms and suites, panoramic sea views, manicured gardens, and the kind of old-money opulence that practically begs for passive-aggressive breakfast scenes.

Originally built as a wedding gift by wealthy cognac merchant Gabriel Dupuy d’Angeac for his daughter Louise, La Messardière radiates inherited privilege and quiet menace—exactly the vibe White Lotus weaponizes best. Think sun-drenched terraces, whispered betrayals by the pool, and a slow unraveling set against one of the most photographed coastlines on earth.

Filming is expected to run from April through October 2026, making this the longest and most ambitious shoot in the series so far. That timeline conveniently overlaps with peak Riviera season, and yes—rumors are already swirling about scenes tied to the Cannes Film Festival, where yachts, egos, and bad decisions collide in spectacular fashion. If Season 2 turned Sicily into a tourism fever dream, Cannes may be next.

There’s also been persistent chatter about Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat appearing on screen. While no official confirmation has landed, earlier rumors triggered anxiety among locals, who worry the peninsula simply isn’t built to absorb the production traffic, security convoys, and onlookers that follow a juggernaut like The White Lotus. Translation: stunning, exclusive, and logistically fragile—again, very on-brand.

And Saint-Tropez may not be the only stop. Insiders hint that Paris could factor into the season as well, potentially broadening the show’s scope from resort-bound dysfunction to elite European power games. After Hawaii, Sicily, and Thailand, this feels like Mike White deliberately turning the lens toward old-world wealth, generational privilege, and continental hypocrisy—a fresh playground for the show’s signature blend of satire, sex, and slow-burn disaster.

If past seasons are any indication, expect a cast stacked with prestige names, breakout chaos agents, and at least one character the internet will collectively despise within weeks. Add Riviera excess, festival madness, and Parisian hauteur to the mix, and Season 4 is shaping up to be less vacation fantasy and more beautifully staged social autopsy.

The White Lotus has always been about what happens when extreme luxury removes consequences—France just happens to be the perfect place to watch that illusion crack.

Friday, January 9, 2026

Menton Celebrates Jean Cocteau and His Friends: Portraits and Self-Portraits

 

Menton’s enduring relationship with Jean Cocteau takes center stage once again with a major new exhibition at the Musée Jean Cocteau – Le Bastion, on view until 8 June 2026. Set within the historic seaside fort that Cocteau himself once transformed into a museum, Jean Cocteau and His Friends: Portraits and Self-Portraits offers a deeply personal lens into the life and imagination of one of France’s most singular artistic voices.

The exhibition brings together over 150 works, largely drawn from the prestigious Séverin Wunderman collection, complemented by important international loans. Together, they trace Cocteau’s creative orbit across drawing, painting, and mixed media, revealing an artist for whom boundaries between disciplines — and between people — were perpetually fluid.

Rather than following a linear timeline, the exhibition unfolds through a series of thematic chapters that reflect Cocteau’s inner life and the relationships that shaped his work. It opens with an exploration of self-portraiture, where Cocteau repeatedly returns to his own image as a site of reflection, vulnerability, and reinvention. These works oscillate between intimacy and theatricality, mirroring the emotional extremes that marked both his personal life and artistic output.


Another key section,
Monstres sacrés, is devoted to the cultural giants who populated Cocteau’s world. Portraits of figures such as Sarah Bernhardt and Pablo Picasso reveal not only admiration, but a myth-making impulse — Cocteau elevates his contemporaries into symbolic figures, capturing their essence rather than their likeness.

The exhibition also highlights the pivotal role of music, theatre, and dance in Cocteau’s creative network. Works dedicated to collaborators like Erik Satie and Francis Poulenc illustrate how these artistic friendships pushed him toward radical experimentation, while a final section devoted to dancers and writers underscores the collaborative spirit that animated his work across decades.

What emerges is a portrait of Cocteau defined as much by connection and exchange as by individual genius. For Cocteau, portraiture was never a matter of faithful representation, but of emotional truth — a way of translating shared intensity, admiration, and creative tension into line and form.

Presented in the Bastion, a site inseparable from Cocteau’s own legacy in Menton, the exhibition reinforces the town’s role as a guardian of his memory. Through thoughtful curation and rare works, it offers visitors a compelling opportunity to engage with Cocteau not as a distant cultural icon, but as a living presence shaped by friendship, dialogue, and artistic risk.

For seasoned admirers and newcomers alike, this exhibition provides an intimate encounter with the creative forces that defined one of the 20th century’s most influential and elusive figures.