France

  • Anne Andreu – Éternelle Jean Seberg (2014)

    2011-2020Anne AndreuDocumentaryFrance

    The life of Jean Seberg, through unpublished testimonies: her son, Diego Gary, her sister Mary Ann, Clint Eastwood, who was her partner. The American actress, the iconic short-haired girl from A bout de souffle, reveals herself to be a passionate, militant, but also secretive and fragile woman. Her tragic ending contributes to her almost mythical aura.Read More »

  • Maurice Pialat – La maison des bois (1971)

    Maurice Pialat1971-1980FranceTVWorld War One

    Quote:
    Made in 1971 for French TV, the epic LA MAISON DES BOIS
    comes from early in the Pialat’s belated
    feature-filmmaking career. Rather like Loach’s DAYS OF
    HOPE (Cinémathèque 2004) or Edgar Reisz’s HEIMAT
    series, it begins in costume drama and an ethnographic
    view of rural French life during World War One, and in
    an apparently sentimental tale of war orphans. But
    then it irises out from costume drama conventions into
    the transcendental, exploring Pialat*s spiritual
    themes, as well as the social dynamics, trauma and
    collective experiences of war.Read More »

  • Robert Enrico – Le vieux fusil AKA Vengeance One by One AKA The Old Gun (1975)

    Robert Enrico1971-1980FranceThrillerWar

    In Montauban in 1944, Julien Dandieu in a surgeon in the local hospital. Frightened by the German army entering Montauban, he asks his friend Francois to drive his wife and his daughter in the back country village where Julien has an old castle. One week later, Julien decided to meet then for the week end, but the Germans are already occupying the village.Read More »

  • Jean Grémillon – Pattes blanches AKA White Paws (1949)

    Jean Grémillon1941-1950ClassicsDramaFrance

    The “white paws” of this noirish melodrama are the gaudy white spats sported by a reclusive French aristocrat in a fishing village on the coast of Normandy. Scripted by French playwright Jean Anouilh, who was originally to have directed it, Pattes blanches was ultimately brought to the screen by Grémillon, who accepted the project after the commercial failure of his Le ciel est à vous. The moody plot concerns the relationship of the aristocrat (Bernard) and his vengeful half-brother (Bouquet) and their rivalry over a promiscuous flirt from the city (Delair) who has married the local innkeeper. Although produced within the framework of the commercial cinema, Grémillon’s film manages to imbue the melodrama with a sharp sense of class divisions and his characteristic visual harmonies. (Harvard Film Archives)Read More »

  • Louis Feuillade – Tih Minh (1918)

    Louis Feuillade1911-1920AdventureFranceSilent

    Jacques d’Athys returns from an expedition to Indochina where he picks up a book that contains the whereabouts of secret treasures and sensitive government intelligence. This makes him the target of foreign spies, including a Marquise of Latin origin, a Hindu hypnotist and an evil German doctor.Read More »

  • Julien Duvivier – Marianne de ma jeunesse AKA Marianne of My Youth (1955)

    Julien Duvivier1951-1960DramaFantasyFrance

    In a Bavarian forest, the pupils of a boarding school are about to have their lives changed by the arrival of Vincent, a young man who can charm wild animals with his guitar. One day Vincent ventures across the lake and meets the mysterious Marianne…Read More »

  • Alexandre Promio – Football (1897)

    Alexandre Promio1891-1900DocumentaryFranceShort Film

    This black and white short film is the first known film about football match.Read More »

  • Med Hondo – Les Bicots-Nègres vos voisins (1974)

    Med Hondo1971-1980ArthouseFrance

    Quote:
    Arguably an outgrowth of Soleil Ô, Les Bicots-nègres analyses the living conditions of African migrant workers in France in the mid-1970s. The film has the potential to be a classic case study of cinematic over-determination. It comprises seven sequences exploring, respectively, the conditions of possibility of cinematic representation in Africa (the opening sequence), historical dissonance through the dialectic of past and present (the post-credit sequence), a flashback to the eve of African independence (the imaginary garden party sequence), the predicaments of the post-colony, an assessment of the living condition of migrant workers and the actions taken to transform these conditions, and a final sequence in a circular mode, which returns to the new cinema.
    In Les Bicots-nègres, Med Hondo engages the dual front of cinema and history through the production of what might be referred to as an indocile image. In the cinema of Med Hondo, the indocile image purports to do, undo and sometimes outdo both cinema and history.Read More »

  • Bertrand Tavernier – ‘Round Midnight (1986)

    Bertrand Tavernier1981-1990DramaFrance

    From IMDB:
    In ‘Round Midnight, real-life jazz legend Dexter Gordon brilliantly portrays the fictional tenor sax player Dale Turner, a musician slowly losing the battle with alcoholism, estranged from his family, and hanging on by a thread in the 1950’s New York jazz world. Dale gets an offer to play in Paris, where, like many other black American musicians at the time, he enjoys a respect for his humanity that is not based upon the color of his skin. A Parisian man who is obsessed with Turner’s music befriends him and attempts to save Turner from himself. Although for Dale the damage is already done, his poignant relationship with the man and his young daughter re-kindles his spirit and his music as the end draws near.Read More »

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