Questions regarding this statement should be directed to: information collected on this site is only used by The Tao of Tea and is never sold or given to third parties for their use. The following discloses our information gathering and dissemination practices for this web site. The Tao of Tea has created this privacy statement in order to demonstrate our firm commitment to our customers' privacy. Terms and conditions of the Leaf Points program can be viewed here. Customers also have the option of placing phone orders directly from our Leaf Room 50. You will receive an email when your order is complete and ready for pick up. For exact timing, check the tracking information provided at the time of shipment.Ĭustomers ordering online from a local zip code will be eligible to pick up at our warehouse at 3430 SE Belmont St. Packages normally take 2-3 days delivery time to addresses on the West Coast & Mountain states, and 5-6 days for Midwest & East Coast states. We ship packages from our location on the West Coast. If using a rural route number, also include the nearest crossroad in the order notes section. Please give us a complete street address (UPS does not deliver to post office boxes). During busy winter holiday times, processing times may be extended slightly. Please allow 7 to 10 business days for processing. If you have a different requirement, please call us at 50. Your order will be shipped to you via United States Postal Service (USPS) or United Parcel Services (UPS) in Ground service. The following rates are effective 1/1/20: There is a $50 minimum for all wholesale orders. Shipping Rates applicable to Continental US 48 States: International orders may also be placed by calling us at 50 (Monday - Friday, 9 am to 5 pm, PST). Shipping rates do not include any potential local, customs duties or taxes that may be charged upon receipt by the local postal services of your area. International shipping rates are calculated at check out. We now offer shipping of your orders both domestically (USA) and internationally. Website: cohenfilmcollection.We accept major credit cards: Visa, Mastercard, American Express, Discover, Diner's Club and JCB. She sells peace-sign badges and gets in a fight with a girl who declares, ‘I don’t like commies or Jews.’ Her mom, meanwhile, tells her to not be so involved (‘You’re too young’), while her male teacher exclaims, ‘No politics in this school! Especially the girls!’ We see a growing sense of unrest that the teachers try to squash during the girls’ prime years of identity-shaping, a dissatisfaction that anticipates the upheaval France would face in 1968.” ( Village Voice) Anne’s older sister attends the same all-girls school, but they both find trouble in their own ways.… At a time when politics is seen as impolite, Frédérique joins a committee at school to fight fascism. “… Anne, who doesn’t quite experience a sexual awakening over the course of the film, has the guidance of a loudmouthed friend who informs her peers that boners can get up to six feet long. But Peppermint Soda feels timeless and relatable while also specific to its era-Kurys herself was between Anne’s and Frédérique’s ages in the years the film takes place. Even Anne, who gazes longingly out of bus windows at her impeccably dressed classmates in tights and red raincoats, is straight out of a sartorial mood board, outfitted in trench coats, ruffled blouses, headbands, beach looks to rival Rohmer girls, and the kind of bangs to which Vogue would dedicate a whole ‘French Girl’ column. “Whereas Bo Burnham’s Eighth Grade boasts a rare authenticity in its depiction of how eighth-graders interact in the digital age… Kurys’s girls are of a more aspirational mind. All Anne wants to do is wear pantyhose like the cool girls in school and pass the school year, and then, bam, the growing pains hit, and everything gets intense. “There’s a lot of talk these days about a certain movie about an eighth-grade girl, but allow me to make the case for another film about a girl in the same grade-Diane Kurys’s Peppermint Soda… In Kurys’s autobiographical 1977 coming-of-age film, set in Paris in 1963 and ’64, thirteen-year-old Anne (Eléonore Klarwein) lives with her divorcée mother and older sister, the fifteen-year-old Frédérique (Odile Michel).….
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