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France on Film: Reflections on Popular French Cinema, edited by Lucy Mazdon. London: Wallflower Press (£13.99)/New York: Columbia University Press ($55.00 cloth, $20.00 trade paper), 2001, 196pp.
The films discussed here have been chosen for their popularity in France. Les Visiteurs went up against and beat Jurassic Park at the box office in 1993. Gazon Maudit (French Twist) was the second most popular film at the French box office in 1995. Locating them within film-cultural and sociohistorical contexts, these writers colourfully evoke the times and places of these films. Responsible for propagating one of the most potent myths of "Frenchness" abroad was Jean de Florette (1986). Maria Esposito explains that it is one of the most mythical of French films because it epitomizes a deliberate attempt at branding cultural exports. Looking to reinstall a notion of national identity at a moment of high immigration and political flux in the 80s, the Mitterrand government promoted a culture of "patrimonialization," branding everything from food to heritage sites with an official stamp. Jean de Florettes idyllic portrait of rural Provence fit the bill perfectly. The image of pastis-swilling old men playing "boule" in the square has been cultivated in arthouse peripherals and TV commercials everywhere. Yet for the French, Florette evokes real memories of childhood trips to see aging grandparents, remembered vacations in the Midi, a France before industrialization, a France that is dead. But these specifics have no such poignancy for arthouse patrons in Minneapolis or Manchester seeking excursions into "French cinema."
From this archetypal premise, the book fractures into nuanced vignettes of French experience. In her piece on When the Cats Away, Mazdon quotes director Cedric Klapisch "whats interesting in a movie is to talk about big things with small things." Its an apt metaphor for what France on Film achieves, seeing individual films as expressions of entire social and cinematic cultures. Juggling location, camera move, dialogue and edit, Will Higbee shows how Bye-Bye (1995), set and shot in the Tunisian suburb of LEstaque in Marseilles, not only challenges negative French stereotypes of North Africans, but takes issue with the genre "cinema de banlieue," much touted by critics in the wake of La Haine, whilst rejected by directors. Bye-Bye really belongs, for Higbee, to a fresh flowering of social realism in 90s French filmmaking. This current is served by Lyn Thomas on Sandrine Veyssets Will it Snow at Christmas? (1996), a film that resonated with French audiences for its honesty about a working-class childhood, and with critics for seeming to herald a fresh New Wave. (Arguably, the film's blend of naturalism and magic realism also chimed that year with Ponette's account of a tainted childhood.) Set in the south, Marius et Jeannette (1997) evokes less a mythical Provence, and more nostalgia for the Provencal community politics of Marcel Pagnols films of the 30s, as well as specific recall of the incendiary politics of May 68. What claim does so regional a flavour have as a national cinema, asks Phil Powrie. In her discussion of When the Cats Away, the most successful French film in American cinemas in 1997, Mazdon catches that sense in which films that, apparently, embody "Frenchness" can exceed these cliches, capturing something of the lives that generate them. British and American critics and audiences remain smitten by French actresses such as Beart, Binoche, Huppert because they epitomize the beauty and "feminine" passivity to which arthouse cinema has acculturated us. For its frank and violent revision of female sexual pleasure, Catherine Breillats Romance (1999) elicited polarized critical responses in the U.S. and UK, countries fiercely informed by the feminist politics that touched film comment. But Romance emerged, Emma Wilson argues, out of a hallowed French philosophical attitude toward love, a context enabling subtler responses in France. France on Film keeps returning to such shifts in reception. When Breillat conducted a Q&A following a screening of Parfait Amour! at the 1996 Cambridge Film Festival, the simplistic questions clearly embarrassed her. France on Film answers a real need for more educational backup in anglophone arthouse programming. It springs from the conviction that we can be smart enough to think and talk about art movies like we think and talk about American movies. July 2001 | Issue 33 NOTE: The contributors to France on Film include Lucille Cairns, Ann-marie Condron, Carla Fabiani, Will Higbee, Anne Jackel, Phil Powrie, Howard Seal, Alison Smith, Lyn Thomas, Darren Waldron, and Emma Wilson. The Wallflower Press edition was published in February 2001. The Columbia University edition is due in both cloth and trade paper in September 2001. Wallflower has a website. MORE FRENCH CINEMA: Directors Jean Cocteau and Robert Bresson PLUS: More book reviews |
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New book from the
editor and writers of
Bright Lights Film Journal
Action! Interviews with Directors
from Classical Hollywood to
Contemporary Iran
(Anthem Art and Culture),
by Gary Morris (Editor),
Bert Cardullo (Introduction),
Jonathan Rosenbaum (Foreword).
London and New York:
Anthem Press, 2009.
"I dare anyone to squeeze between
two covers a more varied, useful and
flat out entertaining sampling of
the personalities that make the
seventh art the liveliest."
David Hudson, IFC.com
Interviews
Robert Bresson
Roger Corman (with Bruce Dern
and David Carradine)
Allan Dwan
Clint Eastwood
Douglas Sirk
Robert Wise
Mania Akbari
Lars von Trier
Michael Haneke
Allie Light
Melvin and Mario van Peebles
Otto Muehl
The Brothers Quay
Barbara Kopple
Federico Fellini
Abbas Kiarostami
François Truffaut
Caveh Zahedi
Peter Bogdanovich and
Joseph McBride
on Orson Welles