he Museum of Modern Art

Similar documents
Final Essay MMED 3850N

Downloaded on T04:20:58Z. Title. Review of Decades Never Start on Time: A Richard Roud Anthology, edited by Michael Temple and Karen Smolens

The french new wave - What is and why does. it matter?

>> 0 >> 1 >> 2 >> 3 >> 4 >> Film Studies THE NEW WAVE

Textbooks, in order of use (available at Gator Textbooks, Creekside Mall):

The Museum of Modern Art U West 53 Street, New York, N.Y Tel Cable: Modernart

BOOK NOW FOLLOW US bfi.org.uk/southbank Tickets from 6. bfi.org.uk

French / French New Wave Cinema: Sources and Legacies. Fall 2009 TR 3:30-4:45 Dey Hall 202. Projections: T 6 p.m.

For further readings please see also the bibliographies in Singerman. Additional reading materials will be distributed in class.

Resonant concrete: building cinematic urban space through sound

Dr. Jeffrey Peters. French Cinema

TCF 340 International Cinema: French Film

KS4 curriculum map. Year 10

PHI FALL 2013 PROFESSOR: GABRIEL ROCKHILL

QUEEN OF HEARTS A film by Valérie Donzelli

WL 4365 Introduction to French Cinema. Professor: Dr. Rachel E. Ney. Office: 419 Clements Hall. Office Hours: Meeting Times: 9:30AM-1:30PM

Les glaneurs et la glaneuse: Transcript

Submission Guidelines

John Trafton. Curriculum Vitae

London Pays Homage to Chantal Akerman with Major Retrospective of Her Installation Work

1. Newspaper and Television Reviewing emotional reactions, little historical perspective

Cahiers du Cinema : New Wave, New Cinema, Reevaluating Hollywood. Edited by Jim Hillier. Harvard University Press Cambridge, Massachusetts

Case Study: Vivre Sa Vie / My Life to Live (Godard, 1962) Student Resource

New Hollywood. Scorsese & Mean Streets

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY APPLICATION FOR NEW COURSE. Submitted by College of Arts and Sciences Date September 12,2003

Wuhan University SUMMER 2018

Michel Marie THE FRENCH NEW WAVE. An Artistic School Translated by Richard Neupert

ENG 026:Introduction to Film

Prerequisite: English 110 or equivalent.

2018 WI Peterborough

Classement British Film Institute (2012)

21G.735 Advanced Topics in Hispanic Literature & Film SYLLABUS

New York University Department of Media, Culture, and Communication Special Topics in Cultural and Visual Studies: DELEUZE S AESTHETICS FALL 2012

French 2323/4339 Fall 2015 French Cinema as Cultural Memory & Artistic Artifact Course Information Sheet and Syllabus

PHIL 436: AESTHETICS II (WINTER 2019) TOPICS IN AESTHETICS PHILOSOPHY OF FILM

SYNOPSIS Tehran. June The uproar of a city swinging with the Green Wave of protest to the rigged presidential election.

The Museum of Modern Art Department of Film

Introduction to Film Studies - Video course

ENG The Modernisms of Film Professor Maureen Turim

New York University Department of Media, Culture, and Communication Special Topics in Cultural and Visual Studies: Deleuze s Aesthetics FALL 2012

2017 Summer Session: May 31 June 28 Course Synopsis Requirements Class participation and short critical responses:

Cinema Vérité & Direct Cinema

Sharing the Gestures of the Creative Process

Course Description. Course Objectives

French 4339 Spring 2018 Introduction to French Cinema in French: History, Culture & Style Course Information Sheet and Syllabus

Film Appreciation Communication Instructor: Jeremy Hawa, Adjunct Professor Office: COMM 103 Phone: (817)

The View from Perlov By: Uri Klein Taken from Haaretz Magazine, Dec

Everything Is Cinema: The Working Life Of Jean-Luc Godard By Richard Brody READ ONLINE

PHI FALL 2011 PROFESSOR: GABRIEL ROCKHILL

MUSIC LESSONS at The Ward Center for the Arts

Modernization. Isolation. Connection. (Iftin Abshir Critical Comment #2)

2. Think Away I-Pods The novelty of movement Early films and early audiences. 4. Three Phases of Media Evolution Imitation Technical Advance Maturity

Powder River News. Weekend Movies. Weekly Weather. Inside this issue: Sunday Movie : Star Wars: The Last Jedi. Saturday DOC : Rough Night

Releasing Heritage through Documentary: Avatars and Issues of the Intangible Cultural Heritage Concept

21L 011 The Film Experience Fall 2012 Prof. David Thorburn

WHITNEY TO PRESENT LIGHTS, CAMERA, ACTION: ARTISTS FILMS FOR THE CINEMA, FEBRUARY 8-APRIL 1, 2007

Papers / Research / Questions. Extra Credit

CINE 212 Film History II Post-World War II Fall 2013

A Review by Laura Busetta, Sapienza University of Rome

JOE LEYDON. MA in Communication Studies, University of Houston BA in Journalism, Loyola University of New Orleans

DEGREE: FILM, TELEVISION AND MEDIA STUDIES YEAR: 4 TERM: 1 WEEKLY PLANNING. Special room for session (computer. GROUPS (mark X) classroom )

PERIOD (S): 6&7. Mailbox at Grenelle or mail: /

Brian Price Curriculum Vitae

Cooperative Learning & MEDIA Circles CONNECTOR

CINEMA HISTORY- SELECTED TOPICS

Film-Philosophy

South Portland, Maine 04106

Suzuki Viewpoints. Physical Theatre Workshop

file:///users/nicolas/desktop/presskit_signesvitaux.htm

Forms that think. Natalia Ruiz Martínez

S583: Rare Book Libraries and Librarianship. Syllabus

THE CURRAN INDEX March Gary Simons

Expressive Culture: French cinema (in English)

Year 3 French Revision Pack Mme. Chevalley & Mme. Welmers

H-France Forum Volume 13 (2018), Issue 4, #1

Tuesday, March 3rd Cinema

Godard by Solanas. Solanas by Godard

On Directing A Film By David Mamet READ ONLINE

French Quarter Festival Presented by Chevron April 12-15, 2018

Film. lancaster.ac.uk/film

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

American criminal trials

CINE 294: World Film History 1945-Present (CINE )

EN Perspectives and Movements in Cinema

First published in Studies in French Cinema 3:2 (2003), The point in time: precise chronology in early Godard

Shira Segal Department of Art and Art History University at Albany, State University of New York Fine Arts 216, 1400 Washington Ave.

A Special Day at the Dream Factory

ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER

THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART PREMIERES FOUR FEATURE FILMS IN APRIL

A JUMP-START TO YOUR FILM CAREER

FACTFILE: GCE A2 MOVING IMAGE ARTS

The French New Wave (revisited)

HANS-JOACHIM ELLERBROCK. Truth, Lies & the Space In Between

FACULTY OF LANGUAGES

Major Film Movements English 344L Class Unique Number: 34845

The Shepherd s Life by James Rebanks adapted by Chris Monks

L AMANT D'UN JOUR DIRECTED BY PHILIPPE GARREL // 2017 // FRANCE // 76 MIN

Year 3 French Revision Pack Mr Hempsted and Mme Chevalley

From Montage to Mounting: The Surprisingly Sexual Drawings of Sergei Eisenstein

The. a film by Nabuhiro Suwa

Transcription:

/> he Museum of Modern Art h West 53 Street, New York, N.Y. 10019 Tel. 245-3200 Cable: Mociernart No. k Tuesday, January 9, I968 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE From January 22 to February 18 the Department of Film of The Museum of Modern Art will present 52 films in a series called "Godard on Film," Not only will the series include a chronological retrospective of the films of the French director (among them, his most recent feature TWO OR THREE THINGS I KNOW ABOUT HER and many shorts not seen here before) but also a group of films that have influenced Godard or that provide amusing and suggestive contrasts to his own work. The series will open with William Wellman's classic I95I gangster melodrama, THE PUBLIC ENEMY, in which a sly, magnetic young actor named James Cagney helped to create a new movie here the urban outlaw. On the following day, the Museum will screen Godard's first feature, BREATHLESS (1959), perhaps one of the two or three most influential movies of the last decade and a classic in spite of itself. At the center of the action is another extraordinary young actor Jean-Paul Belmondo as Michel, the doomed killer, the contemporary heir of the Cagney-Bogart-Gabin tradition. The films in this cycle were selected and arranged by the critic Richard Roud whose new book, Godard, a critical study of the director's work, was published in London in October I967, by Seeker and Warburg and will be published here this month by Doubleday and Company, Inc. On the evening of January 3I, Mr. Roud will give an illustrated lecture at the Museum on the films of Jean-Luc Godard. THE PUBLIC ENEMy is one of the best examples of the American gangster genre swift, violent, ironic, romantic. These are the qualities that Godard»s generation loved and responded to in American movies, and in BREATHLESS Godard wanted to recapture this part of the movie past. He did more than recapture it: he transformed it into a new expression of the modem world and into a new style of film. During this series the Museum will alternate the films of Godard with 11 works from from a variety of genres and/directors such as Dreyer, Rossellini, Resnals, Welles and Kubrick, The selections are intended to be intriguing rather than definitive; THE PUK.IC ENEMY is not the only introduction to BREATHLESS, IT»» ALWAYS FAIR

-2- (h) 5 WEATHER (1955) Is not the only Introduction to A WOMAN IS A WOMAN (I96I), etc. In some cases^ the companion films are influences in a clear, "quotable" sense [Dreyer's THE PASSION OF JOAN OF ARC (I928) and Godard's m LIFE TO LIVE (I962)]; as a rule, they are not. The "connection" may be one of setting atjd atmosphere [VJelles* THE TRIAL (1963) and Godard»s ALPHAVILLE (I965)], of contrasting styles and factions [Resnais* MURIEL (I965) and Godard«s THE MARRIED WOM^\N (196!+)], of genre [^5ankiewic2'8 Tr:lE BAREFOOT CONTESSA (195^) and Godard's CONTEMPT (1965)" radically different approaches to that peculiar, doubly specialized genre, the inside-the«movie-colony-in exile story]. Godard is the most movie-conscious of directors, a film enthusiast and critic vho is also a film artist* This series is intended to provide some idea of the range of ocvie tradition the conventions, techniques, styles, directors that he both uses and surpasses. For no matter what the influence or comparison, Godard invariably produces a film that is strikingly personal, an expression of the most tmique and contradictory talent now working in the medium. The last of the companion films, Jean Rouch»s CHRONICLE OF A SUMMER (I96I), is paired with Godard»s MASCULINE FEHININE (I966), which might be described as the chronicle of a winter. In DEUX OU TROIS CHOSES (I966), Godard continues to experi- ment with a form of dramatic movie journalism, a kind of fictionalized cinema-veritfi. This brings the ceries full circle, from thirties crime melodrama to the reality of modern Paris* Godard is responsive to the claims of both the past and the present; at his best he i'uses tliem, uring one to illuminate the other. In his own words, "In a general fashion, ^reportage* is only interesting when it's inserted in fiction, but fiction is interesting only when it is verified by reality. The»nouvelle vague* is defined, in part, by this new rapport between fiction and reality. It is defined al30 by regret, by nostalgia for a cinema which no longer exists. As soon as you can make films you can no longer make films like the ones that made you want to make them." (Quote from N.Y. Film Bulletin. No, 46, 1964) B o m in Boston in I929, Richard Roud first went to England as a Fulbright Scholar, He taught English there and did free-lance writing on movia«before

-3- W joining the British Film Institute, which sponsors the London Festival. Until early last year, Mr. Roud was also the Program Officer of the British Film Institute, arranging some 20ftpftcialseries each year since I959 for the National Film Theatre. The pressure of his activities became so great that Mr, Roud relinquished this post in order to develop certain important programs for the National Film Theatre. He is a prolific writer on film. He is the regular film critic for the Guardlar and the London correspondent for Cahiers du Civiema, as well as a frequent contributor to the Sunday Times, Sight and Sound, Encounter and other publications, Godard was born in Paris in December of 1930, He studied at Nyon (Switzerland), the Lycee Buffon (Paris), and the Sorbonne (Certificat d'ethnologie, 19^9). His first articles on film appeared in I950 in Gazette du Cinema and in I952 in Cahiers du Cinema (under the pseudonym of Hans Lucas), While working on a dam construction site in Switzerland, Godard shot his first film, OPERATION BETON, in X^^h. From. 1956-1959 ti was a regular contributor to Cahiers du Cinema, one of the leading voices in the group of young critics (which included Francois Truffaut and Claude Chabrol) who became directors and caused a revolution in the French film industry, Godard is still an occasional contributor to Cahiers du Cinema. Since BREATHLESS, which was shot in Paris in the late summer of 1959, Godard has made \h feature films. In addition to his feature work, the Jfijseum series will include most of the shorts he mavie prior to 1959, as well as the sketches he contributed to such omnibus films as THE SEVEN DEADLY SINS. The schedule of films follows: Mon. Jan. 22 PTJBLIC ENEMY. I93I. Directed by William A. Wellman. Distributed by United Artists. 74 min. Jan. 23 UNE HISTOIRE D»EAU. I958. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. 12 min. BREATHLESS. 1959- Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. Distributed by Pathe Contemporary Films, Inc., and Conten5>orary Films, Inc. S'O min. Jan. 25 LES DAMES DU BOIS DU BOLOGNE. 19'+5. Directed by Robert Bresson. Distributed by Brandon Films. 90 min. Fri. Jan, 26 CHARLOTTE ET SON JULES, I958. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. 14 min. THE LITTLE SOLDIER. I96O. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. Distributed by New Yorker Films and West End Films, 88 min.

m /5Sat, -If(U) Jan. 27 IT»S ALWAYS FAIR WEATHER, 1955. Directed by Gene Kelly and Stanley Donen. Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Jfeyer. 102 min. Sun. Jan. 28 ALL THE BOYS ARE CALLED PATRICK. 1957. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. Distributed by Janus Films. 21 min, A WOMAN IS A WOMAN. I96I. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. Distributed by Pathe Contemporary Films, Inc., and Contemporary Films, Inc. 84 min. Mbn. Jan. 29 THE PASSION OF JOAN OF A R C * I928. Directed by Carl-Theodor Dreyer. Distributed by Brandon Films. 85 min. Jan. 50 MY LIFE TO LIVE. I962. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. Distributed by Pathe Contemporary Films, Inc., and Contemporary Films, Inc. 82 mia. Tb. Feb. 1 FLOWERS OF ST. FRANCIS. 19if9. Directed by Roberto Rossellini. Distributed by Rizzoli Films. 78 min. Frl. Feb. 2 LES CARABINIERS. I963. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. Distributed by New Yorker Films and West End Films. 80 min. Sat. Feb. 3 THE BAREFOOT CONTESSA. ls3k, Directed by Joseph Manklewlcz. Distributed by United Artists. 128 min. Sun* Feb. k LE GRAND ESCROC (sketch for LES PLUS BELLES ESCROQUERIES DU MONDE). 1963. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. 20 min. CO^TTEMPT, 1963. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. Distributed by Embassy Pictures. 99 min. Mbn. Feb. 5 THEY LITE BY NIGHT. I9l.8. Directed by Nicholas Ray. Distributed by Brandon Films. 95 min. Feb. 6 MDNTPARNASSE-LEVALLOIS (aketch in PARIS VU PAR...). I963. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. 12 min. BAJID OF OUTSIDERS. 1964. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. piottibuted by Royal Films International. 95 min. Feb. 8 MURIEL. I963. Directed by Alain Resnais. Distributed by Lopert Films1 115 min. Frl, Feb. 9 SLOTH (sketch in THE SEVEN CAPITAL SINS). I96I. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. Distributed by Embassy Pictures. 20 min. THE MARRIED WOMAN. 1964. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. Distributed by Royal Films International. 95 min. Sat, Feb.10 THE TRIAL. I963, Directed by Orson Welles. Distributed by Paramount Television Enterpzises. II8 min. fan. Feb.11 LE NODVEAU MONDE (sketch in ROGOPAG). I963. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. SO min. ALPHAVILLE. I965. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. Distributed by Pathe Contemporary Films, Inc., and Contemporary Films, Inc. 98 min. Hfea, Feb.12 LOLITA. I962. Directed by Stanley Kubrick. Distributed by MetroGo Id wyn-mayer. 152 min. Tu, Feb,13 PIERROT LE FOU. I965. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. Distributed by Astral Films, Toronto, lio min. I

k /6 Prl. Sat, Sun, Feba5 Peb.l6 Feb a? Feb.18-5- (^) CHRONICLE OF A SUMMER. I96I. Directed by Jean Rouch and Edgar Morln. Distributed by Pathe Contemporary Films, Inc., and Contemporary Films, Inc. 90 mtn. UNE FEMME COQUETTE. I955. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard, 10 min. MASCULIKE FEMININE. I966. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard. Distributed by Royal Films International. 103 ^in^ DEUX OU TROIS CHOSES QUE JE SAIS D»ELLE. I966. Directed by Jean-Luc Godard, French version. No English sub-titles, 95 min. TO BE ANNOUNCED *Silent films with piano accompanxmeut by diaries Hofmann. Program subject to change without notice. The hours for the above showings are: Sun., Mon., Tu,, Prl.: 2 St 5:^0; : 2, 5:50 & 8; Sat.: 3 & 5:30. Stills and additional information available from Elizabeth Shaw, Director, and Gary Arnold, Department of Public Information, The Museum of Modern Art, 11 West 53 Street, New York, N.Y. IOOI9, 243-3200.