France

  • André Antoine – L’Hirondelle et la mésange (1920)

    1911-1920André AntoineDramaFranceSilent


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    André Antoine and the Realist Tradition

    After its humiliating defeat in the 1870 Franco-Prussian War, France went through a social revolution. Over the next twenty years, many of its long-standing artistic traditions, such as the classical style of Academy painting, would be cast off in favor of new approaches, such as Impressionism. Live theater was one of the few holdovers from the pre-war era — formulaic pieces spoken by actors in dull declamatory style. But change was coming, voiced by the prophet of naturalism, novelist Emile Zola. “A work must be based in the real . . . on nature,” Zola wrote in Naturalism in the Theater. Zola explained that a playwright must observe facts, with no abstract characters or invented fantasies. Rising to meet this challenge, actor, and theater director André Antoine (1858-1943) founded the Theatre Libre, essentially a community theater, dedicated to showing new work by innovative writers. Antoine also staged works by controversial playwrights from outside of France, such as Ibsen and Chekhov. Under Antoine’s guidance, French theater became serious and legitimate. What is less known about Antoine is that he was also a film director, and a vital link in the development of the ‘realist tradition’ that has so enriched world cinema(…)Read More »

  • Jean Yanne – Les Chinois à Paris AKA Chinese in Paris (1974)

    1971-1980ComedyFranceJean YanneSci-Fi

    Synopsis
    The Maoist Chinese, by some miracle, have occupied Paris (and France) overnight. The patience of these stern, work-oriented and quite puritanical communists is finally completely worn down by the quarrelsome, cynical and decadent French, who cannot cooperate properly even when they are willing…Read More »

  • Chris Marker – L’héritage de la chouette (1989)

    1981-1990Chris MarkerDocumentaryFrancePhilosophyPhilosophy on Screen

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    Made as a series of 13 programmes about the influence of Greek culture in our society.

    The Owl’s Heritage: Sequence

    1. Symposium, or Accepted Ideas
    2. Olympics, or Imaginary Greece
    3. Democracy, or the City of Dreams
    4. Nostalgia, or the Impossible Return
    5. Amnesia, or History on the March
    6. Mathematics, or the Empire Counts Back
    7. Logomachy, or the Dialect of the Tribe
    8. Music, or Inner Space
    9. Cosmogony, or the Ways of the World
    10. Mytholody, or Lies like Truth
    11. Mysogyny, or the Snares of Desire
    12. Tragedy, or the Illusion of Death
    13. Philosophy, or the Triumph of the Owl
    Read More »

  • Romain Goupil – Mourir à 30 ans aka Half a life (1982)

    Documentary1981-1990FrancePoliticsRomain Goupil

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    Documentary on the life of Michel Recanati, a leading figure in the May 1968 riots in Paris. He was also involved in the Revolutionary Communist Youth movement and anti-fascist campaigns. He was imprisoned briefly in 1973, and five years later committed suicide aged thirty.

    This film won the Golden Palm at the 1982 Cannes Film Festival.
    It often gets referenced as one of the greatest films about “1968”.Read More »

  • Pascal Arnold & Jean-Marc Barr – American Translation (2011)

    Drama2011-2020FrancePascal Arnold and Jean-Marc Barr
    American Translation (2011)
    American Translation (2011)

    A love grows from a chance encounter between Chris and Aurore. They are twenty years old and their passion is exclusive. It’s a beautiful love story like you see in the movies… But then Aurore discovers that Chris is a killer. Will she continue to live passionately, an accomplice in spite of herself, or denounce the one she loves in spite of everything?Read More »

  • Jean-François Laguionie – La traversée de l’Atlantique à la rame (1978)

    1971-1980AnimationFranceJean-François LaguionieShort Film

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    Synopsis : Palme d’or du court-métrage au Festival de Cannes 1976.
    Read More »

  • Gaspar Noé – Tintarella di luna (1985)

    1981-1990FranceGaspar NoéShort Film

    Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

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    Noé made two black-and-white short films upon finishing his studies, Tintarella di luna in 1985, and Pulpe amère in 1987. Tintarella di luna tells the simple story of a woman who leaves her husband for her lover.Read More »

  • Gaspar Noé – Sodomites (1998)

    1991-2000EroticaFranceGaspar NoéShort Film

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    Iconoclastic indie filmmaker Gaspar Noe is as soft-spoken as his films are abrasive. The force behind the short film “Carne” (1991) and “I Stand Alone” (1998) — two visually explosive and delectably warped odes to the ordinary madness of a misunderstood horse butcher — Noe writes, directs, produces, shoots and edits films so distinctive that his films have already developed cult followings.

    As part of a French government initiative to promote the use of condoms through graphic depictions of their proper use, Noe made the short “Sodomites” and handled camera duties on Hadzihalilovic’s “Good Boys Use Condoms.”Read More »

  • Gaspar Noé – Seul Contre Tous aka I Stand Alone (1998)

    France1991-2000ArthouseCrimeGaspar Noé

    “A grim portrait of disaffection and loneliness, Gaspar Noe’s I Stand Alone is a movie clearly conceived to make a stir. With an armed, frustrated, and hate-filled time bomb at its center, it unabashedly recalls Taxi Driver, offering its own nihilistic spin on Martin Scorsese’s masterpiece of urban anomie and redemption. For a feature debut, it’s unbelievably daring. Noe doesn’t shy away from sprucing up his familiar story with Godard-ian flourishes, including occasional intertitles, a torrent of offscreen narration, and even a warning to the audience to leave before the wrenching finale. A more jarring conceit is the frequent use of abrupt cuts and fast dollies, accompanied by gunshots on the soundtrack. Genuinely startling and somewhat misconceived, the distracting device nonetheless goes some way toward evoking the volatile mindset of the protagonist.Read More »

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