You're quite right HerrShreck. There's a particularly lovely shot of Dominique Sanda tripping though the apartment in the nude that's remarkable not only for Bresson (where it's a first) but for world cinema as a whole. I can't recall offhand another moment like it in which we're invitied to appreciate the beauty of the nude form without recourse to purience of any kind. Granted Sanda is embodying a sexual being, but Bresson has the utmost respect for the character and her choices -- including suicide. She not a passive sex object at all.HerrSchreck wrote:And isn't there nudity of the gorgeous (speaking via Ehrenstein of Bresson's good eye for nude flesh) young Dominique Sanda in A GENTLE WOMAN? It's been awhile since I pulled out my old vhs but I could swear it's in there. In fact I'm sure of it now that I think about it.kieslowski_67 wrote:I was mildly shocked that Bresson included a nude scene of Antoine Monnier, and I cannot remember any Bresson's other films that show flesh. His films are usually as clean as you can get. Can anyone familiar with the film elaborate on why Bresson included such a scene that's totally anti Bresson?
Bresson on DVD
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- domino harvey
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Enfin! Hopefully alongside the whole bunch of previously announced Bresson too.zone_resident wrote:According to DVDBeaver, the Artificial Eye release is scheduled for April 21st, 2008.
For those in France or with superdoopah superannuated satellite systems it's showing tomorrow night / Wed. morning at 02.00 on Cine Cinema Classic (Visconti's Sandra and Rocco are also in the schedules too).
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Indeed! Let's hope it's a port of the Intermedio which is very handsome indeed! I think I am in the minority in thinking this to be not only one of the best films of the 1970s but also one of Bresson's very best.reaky wrote:This (and A MAN ESCAPED) have been pending from AE for literally years now. Still, a firm release date is encouraging.zone_resident wrote:According to DVDBeaver, the Artificial Eye release of The Devil Probably is scheduled for April 21st, 2008.
I have seen it four times now, three on TV and once on cinema. I only fell in love with it (in fact, I only really understood it) when I saw it on the big screen (a coincidence?). To those who do not rate it, I can only recommend you watch it again and again until you rise to the film's level. Very generally speaking, it's a mistake (and a sign of intellectual arrogance) to think you can evaluate the *very* best films at once.
Uncompromising and brilliant!
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I've seen it twice. Bioth times I found myself to be completely irritated by the foley to the point where it overwhelms all other aspects of the film. Indeed, for me the film is about the foley - the aural world, empty spaces, constant walking, isolation as organized in one's own mind.zone_resident wrote:According to DVDBeaver, the Artificial Eye release of The Devil Probably is scheduled for April 21st, 2008.
I can't say I like it, but I think it's important to see.
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Re: Bresson on DVD
Sorry to bump this thread but does anyone know what's preventing Une Femme Douce from getting a DVD/BR release? IMDb gives production credits to Marianne Productions and Parc Film, with original theatrical releases handled by Paramount in France and New Yorker in the US. Does this mean that New Yorker still has the US video rights?
There is the following comment on a back-channel version:
There is the following comment on a back-channel version:
What legal problems?This is an upgrade of XXXXX's publication. The source is still the New Yorker VHS, but this rip has a better resolution and a higher bitrate. The original rip consisted of 2 CD's and a VBR audio remuxed by xxxxxxxxxxx. I've changed the audio to CBR and joined the two CD's. This is the best version available for this film, a DVD seems distant due to legal problems.
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Re: Bresson on DVD
Has Les Affairs Publiques ever had a digital home video release? I've ended up with that and A Man Escaped being the only Bresson I haven't seen; the latter is easily remediable, of course, but all I can find for Les Affairs is a digitized VHS rip.
Also: has Les Anges du Peche ever had any other release than the French DVD that DVDBeaver reviews? That one seems to be out of print?
Also: has Les Anges du Peche ever had any other release than the French DVD that DVDBeaver reviews? That one seems to be out of print?
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Re: Bresson on DVD
My sense is that as long as Bresson's widow Mylène is alive, Les Affaires publiques won't be more widely seen.
- senseabove
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Re: Bresson on DVD
Well, then. Bootleg it is, I guess. Makes it a shame that I didn't know what I was seeing when I apparently saw a 35mm print of it before a screening of Les Anges du Peche in 2012, since I know I saw Les Anges at that venue that year, and completely forgot it until stumbling across somebody's post of the screening notes here! Maybe my memory'll be jogged when I see it...whaleallright wrote:My sense is that as long as Bresson's widow Mylène is alive, Les Affaires publiques won't be more widely seen.
In the meantime, any leads on Les Anges would be appreciated!