tv Talking Movies BBC News December 25, 2024 4:30am-5:01am GMT
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man speaks french what is it about french cinema? is it the actors? the romance? is it the vision of its auteur directors... 0h! ..or the sheer beauty of the french landscape and the capital city of paris? to explore the wonders of french cinema, we sought out and heard from four individuals who each have a passion for a french film classic. for the bbc paris correspondent
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hugh schofield, it's the absurdist comedy of mon oncle from film—makerjacques tati. for french writer and film critic anais poirier, it's cyrano de bergerac, which she describes as a french monument. and for film professor annette insdorf, it's hiroshima mon amour, emblematic of the french new wave with its clever portrayal of memory. and for talking movies reporter emma jones, it's that much—loved romantic comedy amelie. buzzer sounds so, let's find out what it is about french cinema that excites so many people. welcome to france, and our talking movies celebration of french film classics. i'm tom brook. cinema in france is very much part of the country's heritage. it's rather like delicious french food — something worthwhile, something to be savoured.
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it can be daring, bold, audacious, thoughtful and, at times, quite sexy. for many of us, french cinema made an imprint on our minds at a very early age. the oscar—winning short film the red balloon was a real favourite of mine — one of the first french movies i ever saw. it chronicles the adventures of a young boy in paris as he's followed by a red balloon which has a personality all of its own. i thought it was magical. only when i was older did i realise it had some of the sophisticated themes often found in french cinema. it made use of allegory. it had what appeared to be a religious subtext, emotional depth and a formidable cinematic power. gunshot another big favourite french film classic of mine
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was the crime drama breathless, released in 1960. it flew the flag internationally for the french new wave, a movement characterised by first—time directors making personal, often idiosyncratic, self—conscious movies on a low budget. tyres screech the french new wave was ground—breaking, and it's still influencing the cinema of today. breathless was directed by celebrated french film—maker jean—luc godard. it was bold and audacious, especially in its editing, moving around in time. breathless is both a homage to hollywood film—making, but also a challenge to it. it was quintessentially french. it had originality and attitude, and i loved it. playful music plays
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crowd screams one of my earliest memories of french cinema was watching my father as he laughed uncontrollably as he viewed a french film made in 1953 called monsieur hulot�*s holiday. it starred jacques tati, who also directed it. it was very silly, very playful, affectionate, absurd — and, in an odd way, it made me really love france. jacques tati was a formidable force in french cinema. he directed six films and appeared in many more. one of his films is also a favourite of my colleague hugh schofield, who is the bbc correspondent in paris, and has been living in france for some 30 years. the opening sequence has a wall with "mon oncle" written on it. i'm pretty sure it'sjust up — this one here.
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if you look at, on the... it's that wall there, it has written "mon oncle" at the beginning of the film. i've chosen the film mon oncle — "my uncle" — by the late french director jacques tati. it's a film i've known for many, many years. it's a film that's slightly gone out of fashion but i think it should be back in fashion. it's a beautiful, touching film which feeds my urge for a bit of nostalgia for the old france with a lovely, light, humoristic touch. it couldn't have been made anywhere else but in france. i love jacques tati. we're in what they call old saint—maur — a little town just outside paris, in the banlieues of paris. and it's here in this very square thatjacques tati filmed part of mon oncle in 1957. what he does with the settings is draw a very clear contrast between here — and this is where monsieur hulot, the hero, lives, just right here — and then, just down the road —
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modern, the new, what's coming in. and in the film, what's lovely is that there's this kind of borderline — and, really, he's obviously constructed it like a border, a frontier between the old and the new. and the frontier is this kind of broken—down old wall with an old gate and bricks all around it. on this side is here — lovely, old, popular, working class france, paris. and on the other side is what's coming — and you see the new blocks of flats, white in rectangles, and the big, clean lines of the roads emerging on the other side of this frontier. it's a great feeling to think that jacques tati would have been wandering around here. of course, it would've looked completely different. but these — all this would have been part of what he was using to create this wonderful setting for hulot�*s home town. it's the story of monsieur hulot, who has the misfortune of being the brother of this madame arpel,
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who is the wife of monsieur arpel... ..who are the epitome of the modern, americanised, business—ised couple who live on the other side of this imaginary border line that runs through paris, where modernity is. and they live in this completely bizarre villa — which was constructed in tati's mind, obviously — and the prime example of his sort of architectural approach to film—making — a really, really weird modern house full of gadgets with this antiseptic garden, with a path that runs through it and this fountain like an upturned fish, which spews out blue water. he comes every day to look after his nephew, the boy. with the boy, he has little adventures around here in the good part of town. but then, he has to take him back in the evening to antisepticville. there was an originality in the conception which still shines through.
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originally, the statue had a pipe because monsieur hulot always had a pipe. but a few years ago, they removed the pipe because it was decided that pipes were not acceptable any more. it's still watchable because the theme of old versus new, it's still there. glass shatters what he would make of france today, i have no idea! i mean, back then, he was worried about the way it was going and about modernity, and about the way people were being turned into little ants in factories, and so on. what monsieur hulot would think today, with everyone going around in their headphones and living in these atomised worlds, taking deliveroo — things to eat in their lonely rooms, god knows. buzzer so, i'm going to do a hulot impersonation and pull my trousers up. that's how he walks. chuckles
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one of the most—loved french movies of all time has to be the costume drama cyrano de bergerac, released in 1990. it brought forth praise from both critics and audiences. christian! this film version of the classic french novel is seen by its fans as a masterpiece. a critically acclaimed film about yearning masterfully transposed into cinema. the picture has become problematic because its star, gerard depardieu, is now a controversialfigure. he faces trial on charges he allegedly sexually assaulted two women. but the film has legions of admirers who insist that its artistry has to be separated from any possible transgressions of its leading man. cyrano de bergerac is a french film classic that french writer and film critic anais poirier really loves.
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today, i mean, gerard depardieu has become, for some people, a controversialfigure. there've been allegations. but cyrano de bergerac was made in 1990. gerard depardieu was 42 then, at the peak of his art. you forget that it's gerard depardieu. it's cyrano you're watching, and you're falling in love with cyrano de bergerac. i've chosen cyrano de bergerac, the film directed byjean—paul rappeneau in 1990. you know, it's a bit like the eiffel tower or notre—dame cathedral — it's a monument of a film. cyrano de bergerac is set in paris in 1640. this is cyrano�*s paris, the palais royal, just a stone's throw from the louvre. it's the story of this flamboyant poet and formidable swordsman
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christian has realised that roxane likes a witty man, and he's not witty. and cyrano enters a pact, if you like, with christian, saying, you know, "i'm too ugly to be loved and too ugly to love. "but i will give you my wit, my verve. "and i will write those love letters to roxane." of course, roxane falls in love with christian. she doesn't know she's falling in love with the witty cousin cyrano.
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it is a french monument like no other. it's a universal film about love, about adversity, about self—loathing, but also about bravery. about inner and outer beauty... ..which are universal values, universal themes. now, let's move on to a rather different french film classic, and one that became a worldwide hit when it was released in 2001. amelie, starring audrey tautou, presents paris as audiences often want to see it — as a romantic, idyllic city of love. it's a favourite film of my talking movies colleague emma jones,
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but because of her shyness, she's unable to tackle the big things in her own life. and one of those is a crush that she's got on a young man who she collides with one day in paris. this is very much a film about amelie�*s interior life. audrey tautou — so young, so beautiful — embodies this parisian amelie with her short cut blunt bob. i love the wayjeunet is always dressing amelie in red. it's a colour that suits her complexion beautifully, yet it's such a vivid colour for cinema. you've got this convergence of a genius, like a director, jean—pierre jeunet, and an actress like audrey tautou. jean—pierre jeunet is a master of the whimsical
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and the fantastical. he studied animation, and i think that's really, really evident in his body of work. so much in montmartre has become famous because of amelie, including here. montmartre has always been an artistic quarter, but amelie — set at the beginning of the 21st century in these dazzling, hot, sunny parisian days, all these scenes set around sacre—coeur — and i think, in cinema, it gave paris a whole new lease of life just because of the romantic, idyllic, idealistic way thatjean—pierre jeunet filmed amelie. it does belong to a different era, even though it still feels contemporary enough for us all to relate to.
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well, we're going to finish with another picture that was emblematic of the french new wave. it's an adult love story, rather eerily set in a city devastated by an atomic bomb. it's a movie that makes us think about memory — or, more specifically, repressed memory. it requires our active engagement when we watch it. it's hard work at times, but it's truly rewarding. it's hiroshima mon amour, and it happens to be one of the favourite films of the internationally renowned professor of film, annette insdorf. i ultimately chose hiroshima mon amour because... ..it was a ground—breaking motion picture. this was originally supposed to be a documentary about the atomic bomb. but the director, alain resnais, decided that he couldn't do that.
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he admired the novels of marguerite duras, so he asked her to write something that would evoke a romantic fictional tale... ..but set in the actuality of post—war hiroshima. it's strange to place a romantic story in the context of the devastation of the atom bomb. but the past keeps rushing in. every repressed emotion... child cries ..of the french woman takes over increasingly. and it's rare in french cinema prior to at least the mid—1990s to focus on a woman, and she's so well played by emmanuelle riva.
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the editing makes us aware of how repressed memories are going to flood back in. he used editing in a way that, frankly, had not been done before. i mean, flashbacks existed in film long before hiroshima mon amour, but this was the first time that there were flash cuts — so fast, so imperceptible initially, that you don't even realise that you jumped out of the narrative. and then, these bits of memory build and build, and take over. hiroshima mon amour was extremely influential not only in 1959 and through the early �*60s, but beyond. the fragmented narrative structure was not something
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audiences were habituated to. i am a film professor whose primary responsibility is to show my students the greatest work that has ever been done. i want them to see what it means to be meticulous in the construction of a film, in the screenwriting, in the shooting, and especially in post—production, in the editing, to create a complicated response on the part of the viewer, one that engages us emotionally and cerebrally and leads us to question our place in the historical and political world. looking back at these old classic french films has renewed my love of french cinema. i want to see more of it. these films, in decades past, are like great works of art, and they're still influencing
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many of today's top directors. also, it's reassuring to note that french cinema is still so very much alive. it's becoming more daring, more diverse. it continues to be ground—breaking. it's often audacious, and one thing you can always count on is that it often has a lot of attitude — and that's a big compliment — and i thinkjust what great cinema needs to have. well, that brings our look back at some great classics in french cinema to a close. we hope you've enjoyed the show. please remember, you can always reach us online at: so, from me, tom brook, and the rest of the talking movies production team here in france, it's goodbye as we leave you with a french original — edith piaf singing la vie en rose, which was also performed memorably by marion cotillard in the 2007 film la vie en rose. # c'est toi pour moi moi pour toi, dans la vie # tu me l�*as dit,
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m'a jure pour la vie # et des que je t�*apercois # alors, je sens dans moi # mon couer qui bat # la—la—la—la—la—la. hello there. if you've been dreaming of a white christmas, i'm afraid the reality looks very different. this was christmas eve for most of us — a lot of low cloud around, misty and damp out there, but the real difference is the feel of the weather. it's turned incredibly mild. on monday, it was a chilly day, many of us seeing temperatures only around 4 or 5 degrees, but by the middle of christmas eve,
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we saw temperatures a good five or six degrees above that, so, mild. and that mild weather is going to continue, under this influence of high pressure. that's feeding in a southwesterly wind, notorious for driving in a lot of cloud off the sea, keeping things mild, but damp and dreary from time to time. but christmas morning will be a mild start if you've got early risers in the house — 9 to 11 first thing. again, a lot of cloud around, the cloud thick enough for some drizzle at times. and a weak weather front continues to drive in some outbreaks of rain. here we will see stronger winds across the northern and western isles, and maybe northwest of the great glen. the cloud will break up elsewhere, a brighter afternoon, still another mild afternoon. perhaps not as mild as christmas eve, but nevertheless, 11 to 13 degrees the overall high. and as we move into wednesday, we've still got that weather front. it's going to gradually drift its way that little bit further south, weaken all the time as it bumps into an area of high pressure. so, again, we keep the cloud with us
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and it prevents those temperatures from falling too far. overnight lows between 7 and 10 degrees. now, that front is still with us and it will stay so, as you can see, trailing all the way back into the atlantic. that's going to continue to feed in some moisture from time to time, the colder air sitting in place out to the northwest. so it means on thursday we are likely to continue to see some wet weather around scotland and northern ireland on boxing day. elsewhere, the cloud breaking up, brief glimpses of sunshine, the quiet theme continues, lighter winds for most of us, and temperatures generally between 9 and 12 degrees. now, let's move a little bit further ahead. not that much in the way of significant change on friday, that trailing weather front out in the atlantic still sitting there up into the far northwest. winds very light on friday, so there's not a great chance of breaking up that cloud and seeing that much in the way of brightness. but there won't be any significant rain around for most of us,
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and again those temperatures will be pleasant if you want to get out and about, walk off some of the excesses over the christmas holiday. again, a repeat performance as we move into saturday. some of the rain pepping up a little as it pushes its way into northern ireland and central scotland. and we'll start to see some outbreaks of rain across western fringes of england and wales as well. but we are going to start to see a change as we move out of the second half of the weekend, and it will start to get that little bit cooler, with temperatures back to where they should be for this time of the year, and eventually just below the average. so, the trend is for those temperatures to start to fall away and the reason being is the position, potentially, of the jet stream. we've been on the southern side of the jet, the warmer side of the jet, but for the start of 2025, the jet then sinks south, and it's the jet that drives in the areas of low pressure, and so, potentially, as thatjet stream continues to sink its way south, then it's going to start to feed in further areas of low pressure, so it will turn a little more
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live from london, this is bbc news: midnight mass has been held at the church of the nativity in bethlehem, amid muted celebrations marking a sombre christmas. gunmen in haiti have killed at least two journalists and a police officer at the country's biggest public hospital in port—au—prince. the king is expected to draw on his cancer treatment in his christmas message as the royal family prepare to attend church at sandringham without prince andrew. and in otherfestive news: surf's up for santa — why father christmas took in some big waves before heading off on his sleigh. and we'll be tracking his progress as he moves around the world — find out his precise location later in the programme. hello and welcome — i'm martine croxall. and a merry christmas to you if you're celebrating today.
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