Tinkerwell 5: Welcome to the AI age
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I. L’arrivée Elles arrivent sans bruit, sans valises excepté un carton usé que l’on dirait sorti d’un grenier: lettres jaunies, photographies en noir et blanc, et un médaillon dont la chaîne est rongée. On murmure qu’elles ont quitté Paris après un scandale dont la vérité a été engloutie par des mensonges habiles. Les premières impressions s’effacent vite devant la rectitude de leur allure: Juliette, grande, aux mains toujours occupées par un livre; Margot, plus petite, avec un sourire qui ne se pose jamais complètement. Elles louent la maison des Tisserands, une bâtisse qui regarde la rivière comme une vieille tante distante.

The answer lies in OK.ru’s video policy. Unlike YouTube’s Content ID system, which immediately flags copyrighted French media (especially from the INA), OK.ru operates on a "notice and takedown" system that requires manual filing of DMCA equivalents. French production companies rarely file complaints on a Russian domain.

Les Sœurs Robin is a 2006 French drama directed by Jacques Renard that follows two elderly sisters, Marie and Aminthe, navigating conflict over selling their ancestral home. Starring Line Renaud and Danièle Lebrun, the film explores themes of memory, family secrets, and financial struggle. Find more details on the film's background at IMDb . Les soeurs Robin (TV Movie 2006) - Full cast & crew - IMDb

Les Sœurs Robin isn't a masterpiece. The pacing drags in the middle, and the youngest sister (Julie) is written with a frustrating manic-pixie-dream-child energy that feels dated now. But the final fifteen minutes—set entirely in a phone booth during a thunderstorm—are worth the grainy buffering.

is a poignant drama starring Line Renaud and Danièle Lebrun as sisters grappling with aging, poverty, and the decision to sell their decaying ancestral home [1]. Based on a novel by Yves Viollier, the film explores the profound psychological tension between clinging to memories and embracing the necessity of change [1].