My Gleanings

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Michel Ciment on old times

The September issue of Positif featured an interviews with both Eric Rohmer and Claude Chabrol. This paragraph is translated from Michel Ciment"s editorial on page 1.

It is Claude Chabrol and Eric Rohmer who must be laughing to themselves at the booming proposition of the ex-editor of Cahiers du Cinema. Here are two metteurs-en-scene who, for 50 years, with ups and downs for the first and mostly highs for the second have known how to steer away from the fashionable and pursue an esthetical research in which woman and love are among its most beautiful fruits. If we had supported in the early 1960s Rivette's Paris nous appartient, Truffaut's Shoot the Piano Player, Astruc's La Proie pour l'ombre, and the work of Resnais, Varda, Franju, Marker, Demy, Malle, Deville and Cavalier, this magazine was not kindly towards Rohmer's Le Signe du lion or Chabrol's Beau Serge and Les Cousins. On re-evaluation, we won't blush over it. But, from Les Biches and La Collectioneuse (1967-1968), our columns have been openly favorable to a number of their films. In any case, they confirm the astonishing vitality of a generation of directors, who -- unique phenomenon in the world -- more than a half century after their debuts, continue to bear witness to an independence and a brash originality, from Resnais to Marker, from Varda to Cavalier, and from Rohmer to Rivette and Chabrol. False quarrel, thus, that of young and old, ancient and modern, critical fluctuations as academic as they are sterile.

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Friday, May 04, 2007

Michel Ciment on Jean-Luc Godard in 1993

In the Jan/Feb 63 issue of Film Comment, Patrick McGilligan wrote an article noting the 40th anniversary of Positif. In that article there is this quote from longtime Positif contributor and editor Michel Ciment.


"Godard was better appreciated abroad than in France because we were too close to the sociological aspects of Godard's films, too partisan, too involved. I think Positif attacked Godard [as a filmmaker] because we were blind to his cinematic qualities, and because we were too sensitive to the politics of the man. If you have a certain distance, perhaps, you are more capable of objectivity"


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Monday, April 09, 2007

Positif at Cahiers du Cinema Michel Ciment 10 best Films 1965-1967

These are the ten best film lists of Positif's Michel Ciment for the years 1965-1967 as they were published in Cahiers du Cinema. Each one was published as alphabetical (in French).


1965
Black Peter (Milos Forman)
Winter Light (Ingmar Bergman)
The Magic Desna (Yuliya Solntseva)
A High Wind in Jamaica (Alexander Mackendrick)
King and Country (Joseph Losey)
Kiss Me Stupid (Billy Wilder)
Lord Jim (Richard Brooks)
Il Momento della verità (Francesco Rosi)
Vaghe stelle dell'Orsa (Luchino Visconti)
La Vieille dame indigne (René Allio)

1966
Au Hasard Balthazar (Robert Bresson)
Cul-de-sac (Roman Polanski)
Falstaff (Orson Welles)
La Guerre est finie (Alain Resnais)
L'Homme au crane rasé (André Delvaux)
Fist in His Pocket (Marco Bellocchio)
The Professionals (Richard Brooks)
Les Sans-Espoirs (Miklos Jancso)
7 Women (John Ford)
Walkover (Jerzy Skolimowski)

1967
Accident (Joseph Losey)
Belle du Jour (Luis Bunuel)
The Big Mouth (Jerry Lewis)
The Young Girls of Rochefort (Jacques Demy)
Black God, White Devil (Glauber Rocha)
Intimate Lighting (Ivan Passer)
El Dorado (Howard Hawks)
Pour les fusils perdus (Pierre Delanjeac)
Persona (Ingmar Bergman)
The First Teacher (Andrei Konchalovsky)

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