In the cinema program of Europe 1, "CLAP!", A guest takes part every week a cinema questionnaire on the films of his life.

On Saturday, Chiara Mastroianni answered questions from Mathieu Charrier about his favorite feature films, from those that marked her childhood to those whose music continues to rock her.

INTERVIEW

Every Saturday for an hour in 

CLAP!

, the cinema specialist of Europe 1, Mathieu Charrier, takes a tour of the news of the seventh art.

Each week, a guest, whether or not from the world of cinema, submits to a personal questionnaire on the films of his life.

On Saturday, it was the French actress and singer Chiara Mastroianni, who gave her voice to Luca's mother in the latest Pixar studio, who played the game.

Your first memory of cinema?

I think it's Bambi.

I was taken out before the end or for that matter very shortly after the start.

I was traumatized, moreover I never saw it in its entirety like many children.

It's very strange as a story choice.

Your best memory in the dining room?

I don't have just one!

There are the movies where we went to be able to kiss a boy as a teenager, the movies we liked ... There are so many reasons to go to the movies.

If I had to give one it might be ET while I cried half of the movie.

It's like star wars, suddenly we went a step above.

But I'm telling you this today and if it's necessary in two hours I'll think of something else.

Your worst memory? 

Ah ben Bambi!

It was excruciating, I will make a complaint.

ET was a bit excruciating too because I started crying from the opening credits when he's chased and you don't see the bodies, you just see the legs of the adults chasing the little creature.

It was the only time I went to the movies with my mom and dad, who had been apart for a very long time.

They started arguing at the start of the movie because I was crying.

My father was losing all his means, he was distraught he said to my mother that I had to be taken out and my mother was much harder.

Suddenly the stake no longer became ET but the dispute between the two so I have rather mixed memories.

What movie do you love, but ashamed to admit?

I'm not ashamed at all although maybe I should but I remember I loved Footloose.

At the time it was not at all ashamed to like this movie and now at my age, the shame is quite relative. 

Which movie made you laugh the most?

I have a tie between Santa Claus is a junk, the Bronzes ski and The kings skate.

I am a huge fan of Will Ferrell.

Which movie made you cry the most?

AND of course, and then Kramer versus Kramer.

And sometimes it's not the movies but the actors.

For example, I have a memory of Emmanuelle Devos in a film by Arnaud Desplechin called How I argued, just to mention it to you, my throat tightens.

There is a scene where she is alone in front of the camera and she reads a goodbye letter to her boyfriend who has broken her heart.

It's incredible.

Sometimes it is due to an actor / character alchemy.

But there you start me I do not stop any more.

A cinema dialogue that you know by heart?

I suck at that but I would say the films of the splendid ... Or so AND because at least there are no sentences with subjects of verbs and complements!

Which movie would you like to live in?

The aquatic life of Wes Anderson because the family, the colors of the submarine ... And then Cate Blanchett and Bill Murray.

Finally there is everything you need. 

The most beautiful movie scene? 

Some scenes from The Night of the Hunter I Think with the Children, when she's under dead water with her hair like seaweed.

Paris Texas with Nastasia Kinski, on the other side of the glass all alone lost ... It's difficult to choose just one but one of the most beautiful scenes would be in a Cassavetes film with Gena Rowlands.

The soundtrack that has marked your life the most?

When I was young it was really through Hitchcock that I liked cinema and therefore the composer Bernard Herman.

I am thinking in particular of the music for the film Sueurs froides with this dramatic side.