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French Film Theory and Criticism: A History/Anthology, 1907-1939. Volume 2: 1929-1939 PDF

328 Pages·1988·7.76 MB·English
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Preview French Film Theory and Criticism: A History/Anthology, 1907-1939. Volume 2: 1929-1939

FRENCH FILM THEORY AND CRITICISM A HISTORY/ANTHOLOGY 1 9 0 7 - 1 9 3 9 ~ Richard Abel Volume 11: 1929-1939 PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS/ PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY COPYRIGHT© 1988 BY PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS Published by Princeton University Press, 41 William Street, Princeton, New Jersey 08540 In the United Kingdom: Princeton University Press, Chichester, West Sussex All Rights Reserved Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data will be found on the last printed page of this book ISBN 0-691-05518-1 ISBN 0-691-00063-8 (pbk.) Publication of this book has been aided by the Paul Mellon Fund of Princeton University Press This book has been composed in Linotron Garamond type Princeton University Press books are printed on acid-free paper and meet the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources First Princeton Paperback printing, 1993 IO 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 Printed in the United States of America A Barbara, encore une fois Eeyore turned and walked slowly down the stream for twenty yards, splashed across it, and walked slowly back on the other side. Then he looked at himself in the water again. "As I thought," he said. "No better from this side." A. A. Milne, Winnie-the-Pooh, 1926 Contents Note on Notes, x Preface, xiii Acknowledgments, xxv PART ONE: 1929-1934 The Transition to Sound Selected Texts Jacques Feyder, "The Possibilities of a Broadened Art" (1929), 38 Rene Clair, "Talkie versus Talkie" (1929), 39 Abel Gance, "Images of Yesterday, Voices of Tomorrow" (1930), 41 Jean Dreville, "Documentary: The Soul of Cinema" (1930), 42 Benjamin Fondane, "From Silent to Talkie: The Rise and Fall of the Cinema" (1930), 45 Marcel Pagnol, "The Talkie Offers the Writer New Resources" (1930), 55 Rene Clair, "Film Authors Don't Need You" (1930), 57 Jean Vigo, "Toward a Social Cinema" (1930), 60 Jean Epstein, "The Cinema Continues" (1930), 63 Jean-Paul Dreyfus, "L'Aged'or" (1930), 68 Georges Altman, "Censorship in France: L'Age d'or" ( 193 1 ), 7 l Rene Clair, "Le Million" (1931), 73 Philippe Soupault, ''jean de la Lune or Cinema on the Wrong Track" (1931), 75 Rene Bizet, "Marius and the Popular Spirit" (1931), 77 Joris Ivens, "Reflections on the Avant-Garde Documentary" (1931), 78 Georges Altman, "The Spirit of Film" (1931), Bo Jean-George Auriol, "La Chienne" (1931), 86 Jean Cocteau, "Le Sang d'un poete" (1932), 89 Paul Reboux, "Les Croix de bois'' (1932), 93 Frarn;ois Vinneuil, "Screen of the Week: Les Croix de bois'' (1932), 95 Sacha Guitry, "For the Theater and Against the Cinema" (1932), 98 Marcel Carne, "Cinema and the World" (1932), 102 Leon Moussinac, "The Condition oflnternational Cinema" (1933), 105 Le Corbusier, "Spirit of Truth" (1933), l l l Monny de Boully, "A.B.C.D." (1933), l 14 Georges Neveux, "The Tunnel 1930-1940" (1933), l 17 Antonin Artaud, "The Premature Old Age of the Cinema" (1933), l 22 Vil CONTENTS Jean Renoir, "How I Give Life to My Characters" (1933), 125 Marcel Carne, "When Will the Cinema Go Down into the Street?" (1933), 127 Marcel Pagnol, "Cinematurgy of Paris" (1933), 129 Franc;ois Vinneuil, "Screen of the Week: La Rue sans nom" (1934), 136 Jean Levy, "King Kong" (1934), 137 Valery Jahier, "Angele" (1934), 140 PART TWO: 1934-1939 (0i1ture and Politics: The Popular Front Era Selected Texts Valery Jahier, "Prologue to a Cinema" (1934), 182 Valery Jahier, "L'Atalante" (1934), 186 Valery Jahier, "Toni" (1935), 187 Jean Epstein, Photogenie and the Imponderable (1935), 188 Roger Leenhardt, "More on The Informer and La Bandera" (1935), 193 Roger Leenhardt, "On Opening a School for Spectators" (1935), 194 Franc;ois Vinneuil, "Screen of the Week: La Kermesse heroi"que" (1935), 195 Roger Leenhardt, "Cinematic Rhythm" (1936), 200 Pierre Bost, "Le Crime de Monsieur Lange" (1936), 205 Maurice Jaubert, "The Cinema: Music" (1936), 206 Jean Renoir, "The Photogenic Golden Calf' (1936), 21 l a Pierre Bost, "La Vie est nous" (1936), 2 l 2 Louis Chavance, "The Cinema in the Service of the Popular Front" (1936), 213 Jean Cassou, "From Avant-Garde to Popular Art" (1936), 217 Georges Sadoul, "Apropos Several Recent Films" (1936), 218 Georges Sadoul, "The Cinematheque franc;aise" (1936), 223 Georges Sadoul, "Les Bas-Fonds" (1936), 225 · Franc;ois Vinneuil, "Screen of the Week: The Cinema Awards" (1936), 228 Henri Langlois, "Les Bas-Fonds" (1937), 229 Georges Franju, "Exhibitionism" (1937), 231 Alberto Cavalcanti, "The Neorealist Movement in England" (1937), 233 ~orges Sadoul, "La Marseillaise, a Popular Epic" (1938), 238 Franc;ois Vinneuil, "Screen of the Week: La Marseillaise" (1938), 241 Roger Leenhardt, "La Marseillaise" (1938), 245) Claude Aveline, "Films and Milieux" (1938), 246 Vlll CONTENTS l, HenriJeanson, "Jean Renoir" (1938), 247 Emile Vuillermoz, "A Case of Conscience" (1938), 250 Georges Sadoul, "Setting and Society" (1938), 255 Fran~ois Vinneuil, "Screen of the Week: La Bete humaine" (1938), 256 Georges Sadoul, "A Masterpiece of Cinema: La Bite humaine" (1939), 259 Claude Aveline, "Apropos the Prix Louis Delluc" (1939), 262 Georges Altman, "Le]our se /eve: A pure film noir" (1939), 266 Claude Aveline, "John Ford" (1939), 269 lL Fran~ois Vinneuil, "Screen of the Week: La Regle du jeu" (1939), 272 L- Georges Sadoul, "La Regle du jeu" (1939), 276 Index, 281 IX Note on Notes NOTES to the preface and each of the introductory essays to the two parts of this book will be found immediately following the preface and the two essays. Notes to the anthology selections follow each text. These notes are mine unless otherwise indicated: those written by the author of the selec tion are marked Au; those by the other translators are marked TRANS. The cinema {is] an amusement for slaves, a pastime for ignoramuses. Georges Duhamel, 1930 I submit that the cinema is a new art form which has its own rules and unique practices, that it cannot be reduced to a form of theater, and that it ought to be as useful to cultural understanding as Greek and philosophy are. Jean-Paul Sartre, 1931 {History] has taken as its primary task, not the interpretation of the document, not the attempt to decide whether it is telling the truth or what is its expressive value, but to work on it from within and to develop it: history now organizes the document, divides it up, distributes it, orders it, arranges it in levels, establishes series, distinguishes between what is relevant and what is not, discovers elements, defines unities, describes relations. The document, then, is no longer for history an inert material through which it tries to reconstitute what men have done or said, the event of which only the trace remains; history is now trying to define within the documentary material itself unities, totalities, series, relations. . . . history is one way in which a society recognizes and develops a mass of documentation with which it is inextricably linked. Michel Foucault, 1969 XI

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These two volumes examine a significant but previously neglected moment in French cultural history: the emergence of French film theory and criticism before the essays of Andr Bazin. Richard Abel has devised an organizational scheme of six nearly symmetrical periods that serve to "bite into" the dis
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