truffaut is one of my favorite filmmakers ever as i not only enjoy his work but also the fact that this is a man that loved cinema.
@thevoid999 жыл бұрын
***** true but other than quentin tarantino, i don't know any filmmaker who is so devoted to writing and making films about cinema better than truffaut did in his time. i finally saw all of his films last year and there will never be another man like him.
@SuperAdamh19 жыл бұрын
***** I wonder if one would say that Werner Herzog loves cinema. Like Bertolini, his output is goes beyond the film medium. There are some artists who are, shall we say, trans-medium. For them the medium is not the message.
@mmassias9 жыл бұрын
***** John Ford loved filmmaking, but disliked pictures and watching to them
@mmassias9 жыл бұрын
thevoid99 and, of course, one thing that fuelled the Nouvelle Vague and Cahiers du Cinéma was cinephilia. I, for one, think that cinephilia is a rarity in our times. It is pretty hard to see young viewers consuming films so warmly. Maybe TV series are to blame, who knows? However, can't they be a new sort of cinephilia? That intrigues me.
@thevoid999 жыл бұрын
Senhor F times have changed to be a cinephile though there are still a few that devote themselves to cinema such as myself as i did write a 2-part piece on truffaut which you can read here: cinemaaxis.com/2015/01/05/the-auteurs-francois-truffaut-part-1/ and here: cinemaaxis.com/2015/01/06/the-auteurs-francois-truffaut-part-2/
@StoryeTime9 жыл бұрын
And Truffaut himself was one of the lucky young kids who got to enjoy Henri Langlois' magnificient screenings. If you haven't yet, you have to watch the documentary "Henri Langlois, phantom of the cinematheque". I'm French and have always been into cinema but this documentary blew me away. Thank you for this excerpt!
@deaconpeters2994 Жыл бұрын
I met François Truffaut and he invited me to the wedding of his friends, Jules and Jim. When I got to the wedding, I knew things were kinda off when I saw someone trying to Shoot The Piano Player and even more off when I noticed that The Bride Wore Black. I don't know, but if you ask me, it was a real Day For Night kinda situation. After all the confusion and chaos, I stayed at a Bed And Board because all I had was Small Change on me. I couldn't get any sleep due The Woman Next Door making too much noise and The Wild Child screaming in the other room. In conclusion, Mr. Truffaut told me he was sorry for how everything played out and wished me the best of luck on my journey back home. But it was just my luck... I had just missed The Last Metro... Whether if anyone actually reads this whole thing or not, you are truly an outstanding person! :) I love all of François Truffaut's films and his works!
@willieluncheonette58437 ай бұрын
Shoot the Piano Player is one of my 13 all time favorite films.
@dragoniguana9 жыл бұрын
My favourite director. The Soft Skin was a great addition, and I'm hopeful for Truffaut in the Criterion Collection.
@MartinDelCarpio9 жыл бұрын
I'm hoping for The Bride Wore Black to be released on Blu-ray.
@HawkSchlock9 жыл бұрын
Twilight Time released it earlier this year... www.screenarchives.com/title_detail.cfm/ID/28464/THE-BRIDE-WORE-BLACK-1968/
@beflygelt6 жыл бұрын
Djoughls and Djim
@garychu15052 жыл бұрын
If you mentioned Francois Truffaut & it's no way that you missed to mark his frequent partner Mozart of Cinema Georges Delerue to refine most of his films .....!? Thanks
@michaszeremeta47459 жыл бұрын
why criterion didnt put on YT any other material like That?
@johnkrieger185 Жыл бұрын
Truffaut had other influences besides Renoir and Hitchcock.
@benzgafoor6 ай бұрын
❤
@manuem89965 жыл бұрын
I've never been able to came to a judgment about Hitchcock, despite I've seen big part of his work. I mean, I don't perceive poetic from his movies. Yes they are easily recognizable, and extraordinary well made; but is this enough to define an artist? Maybe it's me, but I can't see in him anything more than a master of technic, as Spileberg or Nolan in our days (Relatively speeking). His he an artist, an artist of entertainment or what also? Would like to know other's thoughts.
@blakebonecutter4 жыл бұрын
@paul w That is ludicrous. Imagine claiming that Mozart and Bach are too calculated to be great musicians. The solid grasp of theory and firing on all its cylinders is what makes Hitchcock a titan, and is what Truffaut saw. To compare Hitchcock's mastery of form to Nolan's admiration for technical craft (mostly so in cinematography and less so in editing) fundamentally misses the point by a country mile.
@luismarioguerrerosanchez47474 жыл бұрын
The thing with Hitchcock is that didn't write his own scripts unlike Truaffaut, and the vast mayority of his works were adaptations of plays. But what you're missing is: One, the calculated nature of his fims that you mention, is something that practically didn't exist at the time, I can talk for hours about the McGuffin, the concept of suspense vs mystery, the use of actors and color in his films that created innovative techniques that were adopted by every film director that followed. All this innovations are just as important as Bach's use of tuning in music. Second, he had a huge personality, even though he didn't write his own movies, the themes they have reflect a lot on Hitchcock's obsessions and paranoias and is very interesting how he translated those ideas into movies.
@bohemianskingdom75283 жыл бұрын
@@grahamh.4230 wow ✨
@maanveersingh252 жыл бұрын
@@grahamh.4230 He didn't criticize him. He pointed out something Hitchcock didn't show a lot. Maybe it's the way he likes his films. Poetic slow expressing the melody of nature. If he does then Hitchcock and other technical directors are not his taste. Different people like different kind of oranges.
@zmani43792 жыл бұрын
I think these are good comparisons - and you point to Hitchcock's limitations, which he himself reflected on w Truffaut - I think where Hitchcock was more personal, and made his profound contribution, was in his use of the medium in playing out his own relationship w the audience - this embracing of film's voyeuristic nature - making a big point of who or what is looking at whom, and where we the audience figure into this, implicating us in the act of watching - in this respect, I think Hitchcock goes beyond someone like Spielberg, who embodies Hollywood brilliantly, as Griffith did, but never transcends storytelling to comment on it as Hitchcock does - and Nolan made one profound film IMO, Memento, and then retreated into this technical preoccupation you describe - in any case, for me someone like Renoir is certainly the greatest artist mentioned here, much deeper than Hitchcock or Spielberg