578 The Complete Jean Vigo
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- Joined: Mon Jan 29, 2007 5:07 pm
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Just watched my spanish edition a couple of days ago, and on the extras section, there's a 40 min doc called "Les voyages de L'Atalante", directed by Bernard Eisenschitz, which contains some alternate shots. This "block of ice" scene appears on the doc, for the 1990 retauration. They simply didn't know where to put it. The scene is only 5-6 seconds long, tough.
Another alternate take is shown for the song of the street vendor in the café, quite different. Shot from a high angle, forgetting the main characters completely and just following the vendor trough the café.
No a mention to the wrestling scene.
Another alternate take is shown for the song of the street vendor in the café, quite different. Shot from a high angle, forgetting the main characters completely and just following the vendor trough the café.
No a mention to the wrestling scene.
- Saturnome
- Joined: Sun Aug 12, 2007 5:22 pm
I have the original VHS of the movie, the block of ice shot seems out of place: it just pop out of nowhere, I guess shots of Jean walking to the block or something where never found so they cut it, but I kinda like it. The dissolves in the wrestling is also there. Are they the only modifications, other than (I guess) a restoration of the picture and sound? Seeing the post about alternate takes, I wonder if some changed.
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- Joined: Wed Sep 05, 2007 10:38 am
Just to note, this documentary is also on the Artificial Eye release...Paupau wrote:Just watched my spanish edition a couple of days ago, and on the extras section, there's a 40 min doc called "Les voyages de L'Atalante", directed by Bernard Eisenschitz, which contains some alternate shots. This "block of ice" scene appears on the doc, for the 1990 retauration. They simply didn't know where to put it. The scene is only 5-6 seconds long, tough.
Chris xx
- manicsounds
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 10:58 pm
- Location: Tokyo, Japan
Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
Nice. All the features are transfered over from the French/UK DVD set, plus a lot more. Looks like I'll be upgrading to the BD for this one, and completely worth it.
- zedz
- Joined: Sun Nov 07, 2004 7:24 pm
Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
This really does look marvellously comprehensive, rendering the previously essential Artificial Eye set obsolete at a stroke.
- prokosch
- Joined: Fri Oct 16, 2009 7:06 am
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Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
I'm still in awe that this is being released (at that price point!!), not least because I don't have a region-free player. As pointed out, a wealth of material to absorb. August had better hurry itself up.
- Steven H
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 3:30 pm
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Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
Is this the first time a whole episode of Cinéastes de notre temps has been included on a Criterion disc? Nice to see that.
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- Joined: Wed Nov 03, 2004 9:11 pm
Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
I'm really looking forward to owning "L'Atalante" on Blu-ray. Who would have thought that we'll get "People on Sunday" and "L'Atalante" on Blu-ray in the same year (knocking two films off my most wanted Blu-ray list)? Nice going, Criterion! How about releasing "Partie de Campagne" on Blu-ray, too? This or next year perhaps?
- swo17
- Bloodthirsty Butcher
- Joined: Tue Apr 15, 2008 10:25 am
- Location: SLC, UT
Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
Others are probably thinking it but I'll just come out and say it: release of the year. I just wish it were coming out a month earlier so I could see all these in HD before finalizing my 1930s list.
The cover's growing on me.
The cover's growing on me.
SpoilerShow
No, seriously, wasn't Dasté's head smaller earlier this afternoon?
- domino harvey
- Dot Com Dom
- Joined: Wed Jan 11, 2006 2:42 pm
Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
Surely I cannot be the only one who ran through the AE Vigo set, shrugged their shoulders, and moved on with their life? Am I even allowed to say that Vigo does nothing for me without being placed on some sort of Cinemaphile Probation?
- knives
- Joined: Sat Sep 06, 2008 6:49 pm
Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
No I agree. Outside of Propos I'm not overly fond of him to be honest. If it were more packed I'd likely be getting Cul-de-Sac instead (it's worse than the Vigo's but oh so weird).
- ellipsis7
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 1:56 pm
- Location: Dublin
Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
This is shared with the AE Vigo set, which includes the full CdeNT film plus the outtakes of A PROPOS... Shall be interested to see how the transfers of the main features/shorts compare...Steven H wrote:Is this the first time a whole episode of Cinéastes de notre temps has been included on a Criterion disc? Nice to see that.
- Jun-Dai
- 監督
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- Contact:
Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
Probation, definitely.
But in all seriousness, L'Atalante was a bit of a let-down for me. I think Vigo's much more interesting for what he did with the medium than L'Atalante is to watch. Zero is about the right length for his style of filmmaking, on the other hand, and while I haven't seen it in over a decade, I have fond memories of it. The other two I've never seen.
But in all seriousness, L'Atalante was a bit of a let-down for me. I think Vigo's much more interesting for what he did with the medium than L'Atalante is to watch. Zero is about the right length for his style of filmmaking, on the other hand, and while I haven't seen it in over a decade, I have fond memories of it. The other two I've never seen.
- NABOB OF NOWHERE
- Joined: Thu Sep 01, 2005 12:30 pm
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Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
The main meat from the AE/Gaumont is on the Criterion but there are a couple of truffles missing. Manuel de Oliveira's piece, Nice a propos. Letters read by Mathieu Almaric. Marc Perrone in concert and numerous photos and poster art. Surprisingly seemingly missing are the pieces by Lindsay Anderson and Bertolucci that you would have thought would be a must given the re-release of 'If'. Also the Gaumont artwork is very nice with original poster work on the inside cover and a well made MoC standard booklet. The biggest bonus in terms of a double or even treble dip is the Blu as Gaumont have no plans to upscale.ellipsis7 wrote:This is shared with the AE Vigo set, which includes the full CdeNT film plus the outtakes of A PROPOS... Shall be interested to see how the transfers of the main features/shorts compare...Steven H wrote:Is this the first time a whole episode of Cinéastes de notre temps has been included on a Criterion disc? Nice to see that.
- Finch
- Joined: Mon Jul 07, 2008 5:09 pm
- Location: Edinburgh, UK
Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
Count me among those who prefer the shorts to L'Atalante and admire the film more than love it. Perhaps seeing L'Atalante in HD will make a difference (wouldn't be the first time I found a viewing experience more immersive).
- ellipsis7
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 1:56 pm
- Location: Dublin
Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
I fell for L'ATALANTE in 1989, seeing it on the big screen following the major resto then, and never really shifted my position, part of its fascination lies in its unclassifiability... A companion to this set is the Lorrimer book (pub.1983, now OOP) "The Complete Jean Vigo", which contains the scripts and other writings by Vigo relating to all the films...
- HerrSchreck
- Joined: Sun Sep 04, 2005 11:46 am
Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
L'Atalante just sends me... lord just the sound of the score-- hell even the thought of it-- sees me levitate.
There's a silliness and a gloominess about the film that is just utterly unique; the silliness of the sense of humor, typified of course by Michel Simon's Pere Jules. From the moment following the wedding when he minces absurdly (running like his feet were tied together with short strings) back to the holy water at the church and with a look on his face like he was about to bust out laughing making the sign of the cross (and "God's deserted us," back on the barge a moment later), the film is filled with a sense of a long running inside joke between he and Vigo. Almost as though the two of them were laughing their way straight thru the film because of the stuff they were putting into it... almost like the silly atmosphere on the old days of the Stern show where Howard Jackie and Fred can barely keep together because of how funny they know the show is and what they're getting away with, a la one of the better Richard Simmons appearances.
I mean the film just had me in tears of hysterics, i e when Jules is going bananas with Parlo's dress while she's trying to pin it, asking Daste over and over and over again if he's going fishing (after jumping in the water looking for his wife). The thief cornered at the train station yelping and whimpering and jumping around like a spastic dog on methamphetamine. The performer at the little cafe (The Poultry Is Inside).
Meanwhile wrapping around all this absurdity is a cloudy, rusty, gloomy, yet sensual atmospheric, thick with fog and a heavy sense of the long ago and far away that for me is just absolutely seductive. When Parlo & Daste are separated from each other but simultaneously longing to jump each other's bones signified by these wonderful superimpositions over one another passing their hands over their own bodies, intercut with the two of them swimming in the canal. . . christ it's just sublime stuff.
Vaguely conjures a feeling not too dissimiliar to Rimbaud, another young poet with a very limited output who merges the intensely beautiful with the out-to-lunch.
I love all of Vigo-- the canon is an endlessly rewatchable series of confections that I periodically go back to to get refreshed by. The late twenties and early thirties were such a magical time in Paris-- Kirsanoff, Vigo, Gremillon, Epstein, Dreyer, Renoir, Cocteau just wonderful stuff. One could go on and on with the names.
There's a silliness and a gloominess about the film that is just utterly unique; the silliness of the sense of humor, typified of course by Michel Simon's Pere Jules. From the moment following the wedding when he minces absurdly (running like his feet were tied together with short strings) back to the holy water at the church and with a look on his face like he was about to bust out laughing making the sign of the cross (and "God's deserted us," back on the barge a moment later), the film is filled with a sense of a long running inside joke between he and Vigo. Almost as though the two of them were laughing their way straight thru the film because of the stuff they were putting into it... almost like the silly atmosphere on the old days of the Stern show where Howard Jackie and Fred can barely keep together because of how funny they know the show is and what they're getting away with, a la one of the better Richard Simmons appearances.
I mean the film just had me in tears of hysterics, i e when Jules is going bananas with Parlo's dress while she's trying to pin it, asking Daste over and over and over again if he's going fishing (after jumping in the water looking for his wife). The thief cornered at the train station yelping and whimpering and jumping around like a spastic dog on methamphetamine. The performer at the little cafe (The Poultry Is Inside).
Meanwhile wrapping around all this absurdity is a cloudy, rusty, gloomy, yet sensual atmospheric, thick with fog and a heavy sense of the long ago and far away that for me is just absolutely seductive. When Parlo & Daste are separated from each other but simultaneously longing to jump each other's bones signified by these wonderful superimpositions over one another passing their hands over their own bodies, intercut with the two of them swimming in the canal. . . christ it's just sublime stuff.
Vaguely conjures a feeling not too dissimiliar to Rimbaud, another young poet with a very limited output who merges the intensely beautiful with the out-to-lunch.
I love all of Vigo-- the canon is an endlessly rewatchable series of confections that I periodically go back to to get refreshed by. The late twenties and early thirties were such a magical time in Paris-- Kirsanoff, Vigo, Gremillon, Epstein, Dreyer, Renoir, Cocteau just wonderful stuff. One could go on and on with the names.
- Jun-Dai
- 監督
- Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2004 4:34 am
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- Contact:
Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
I personally thought that the separated/longing superimpositions were over the top and awkwardly done. I was in stitches when Annette Insdorf in the video interview on the New Yorker disc said something to the effect that it was the most erotic scene ever filmed.
The film definitely does have some incredibly touching moments, but I don't really consider that one of them.
The film definitely does have some incredibly touching moments, but I don't really consider that one of them.
- ellipsis7
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 1:56 pm
- Location: Dublin
Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
Re. the swimming sequence in L'ATALANTE, it's fascinating to compare the techniques Vigo used in TARIS to those used dramatically here...
- Tommaso
- Joined: Fri May 19, 2006 10:09 am
Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
Which reminds me: isn't it a good time now to get your exclusive audiocommentary out to us? I really appreciated your take on "Menilmontant", btw, belated thanks for that.HerrSchreck wrote:L'Atalante just sends me... lord just the sound of the score-- hell even the thought of it-- sees me levitate.
- Cold Bishop
- Joined: Tue May 30, 2006 9:45 pm
- Location: Portland, OR
Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
They have to reinsert the ice shot and the wrestling superimpositions!
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- Joined: Wed Sep 26, 2007 7:56 am
Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
Time to get rid of my New Yorker L'Atalante disc?
- A
- Joined: Wed Jan 23, 2008 6:41 pm
Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
Don't think that will happen, as these bits were included in an earlier resto (1990), which has for some reasons been "disregarded" by the Gaumont people...Cold Bishop wrote:They have to reinsert the ice shot and the wrestling superimpositions!
- MichaelB
- Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 6:20 pm
- Location: Worthing
- Contact:
Re: 578 The Complete Jean Vigo
I'm firmly in the pro-L'Atalante camp (and agree 100% with everything Schreck says), but I've only ever seen it in 35mm - and the comments above suggest that this makes a significant difference.