Tag Archives: Jean-Pierre Melville

TAVERNIER’S CINÉMA FRANÇAIS

“Jacques Becker’s mise en scène flexes the emotions, the way you flex your muscles.” — Bertrand Tavernier

Long before he directed Isabelle Huppert and Philippe Noiret in Coup de torchonDexter Gordon in Round Midnight, or Dirk Bogarde and Jane Birkin in Daddy nostalgie, Tavernier was a cinephile par excellence. In his youth he founded a cinema club, wrote for Cahiers du cinéma, was an assistant to Jean-Pierre Melville, a publicist for Raoul Walsh and John Ford, and co-authored the volume 30 ans de cinéma américain (and its update 50 ans, both with Jean-Pierre Coursodon).

And he went to thousands of movies: in his hometown of Lyon, at a sanitorium in St. Gervais (recovering from childhood TB), in his boarding school village, and in Paris, a film-lover’s Valhalla. What he saw during those years he’s brought to the screen in his very personal new documentary VOYAGE À TRAVERS LE CINÉMA FRANÇAIS.

“A remarkable work, made with great intelligence. VOYAGE is enlightening about classic French cinema, and about many forgotten or neglected filmmakers. You are convinced that you know all that by heart, until Tavernier comes along to reveal to us the pure beauty of it all.” – Martin Scorsese

MY JOURNEY THROUGH FRENCH CINEMA/VOYAGE À TRAVERS LE CINÉMA FRANÇAIS, through July 20.

LAEMMLE ROYAL, 11523 Santa Monica Boulevard, West Los Angeles

laemmle.com/films/42390

Jean Gabin and Arletty in Le jour se lève (1939), directed by Marcel Carné.

Le_Jour_se_leve_Daybreak_6_carne-300x223

Image credit: Pathe

COLCOA — L’ODYSSÉE

The 21st annual COLCOA FRENCH FILM FESTIVAL is here, presenting nine days of premieres at the Directors Guild Theater in Hollywood. Some highlights from the first few days of the fest:

L’OPÉRA—a documentary about the Paris Opera directed by Jean-Stéphane Bron, and a worthy complement to Frederick Wiseman’s La Danse (2009)—screens Tuesday evening, April 25 at 5 pm.

Later that night, rustic farceur Bruno Dumont screens his new satire SLACK BAY / MA LOUTE. Tuesday, April 25 at 7:30 pm.

Lambert Wilson, Audrey Tautou, and Pierre Niney headline L’ODYSSÉE, a biopic of adventurer and filmmaker Jacques Cousteau. Directed by Jérôme SalleL’ODYSSÉE screens on Wednesday night, April 26 at 8:30 pm. (Wilson will participate in a post-screening Q & A.)

Director Stéphane Brizé—known for contemporary dramas starring Vincent Lindon—takes on Guy de Maupassant in the trenchant period piece A WOMAN’S LIFE / UNE VIE, starring Judith Chemla, and screening Thursday evening, April 27 at 7:25 pm. (Brizé will attend.)

Also Thursday, Pierre Deladonchamps stars in A KID / LE FILS DE JEANan examination of paternity and identity directed by Philippe Lioret, who is in town for the festival.

POLINA—directed by Valérie Müller and choreographer Angelin Preljocaj—takes wing once its eponymous protagonist leaves the Bolshoi (and Moscow) for France. But the lessons learned at the dance academy in Aix are only the beginning of Polina’s European education.

Starring Mariinsky dancer Anastasia ShevtsovaNiels Schneider, dancer-choreographer Jérémie Bélingard, Preljocaj star Sergio Diaz, and Juliette Binoche (who has danced for Akram Khan), POLINA screens on Friday evening, April 28 at 5:45 pm.

COLCOA FRENCH FILM FESTIVAL

Through May 2.

Directors Guild

7920 Sunset Boulevard, Hollywood.

From top:

Scene from L’Opéra.

Judith Chelma in Un vie.

Pierre Deladonchamps and Gabriel Arcand in Le fils de Jean.

Anastasia Shevtsova in Polina.

Audrey Tautou in L’Odyssey.

JEAN COCTEAU AT CINEFAMILY

Jean Marais in Orphée, directed by Jean Cocteau Image: Pop Classics

Jean Marais in Orphée, directed by Jean Cocteau
Image: Pop Classics

Jean Cocteau—perfectly suited to the visual medium of mirrors, dreams, and life after death—was a filmmaker for three decades, but his greatest engagement took place during the five years immediately following the end of the Second World War, a period which began with one masterpiece (LA BELLE ET LA BÊTE, 1945) and ended with another—ORPHÉE.

Cocteau’s perennial star Jean Marais takes the title role, and the film features François Périer, Edouard Dermithe, Juliette Greco, and a cameo by Jean-Pierre Melville (who directed the film of Cocteau’s novel LES ENFANTS TERRIBLES the same year.) Death is played by Maria Casarès—the great star of Bresson’s LES DAMES DU BOIS DE BOULOGNE—and her henchmen in wide leather cummerbunds attend to their errands on motorcycle.

ORPHÉE is dedicated to the artist and designer Christian Bérard, who died while the film was in pre-production.

The closest the cinema has ever got to poetry.” — Leslie Halliwell on ORPHÉE

 

ORPHÉE / ORPHEUS  (1950, Jean Cocteau)—in 35 mm—Saturday, March 18 at 3 pm.

CINEFAMILY AT THE SILENT MOVIE THEATRE, 611 North Fairfax, Los Angeles.

cinefamily.org