RSS file with home page updates in XML RSS Info divider Bookmark divider email Join our email list! divider cartCart  
Icarus Film
Distributing innovative and
provocative documentary films
from independent producers
around the world
  
  Search Help
32 Court Street, Brooklyn, NY 11201divider(718) 488 8900
Colette
A Film by Yannick Bellon
Send to a Frienddivider Text Size Increase Font Size Decrease Font Size divider Printable VersionPrintable Version

film still
Colette is on the same DVD as Yannick Bellon and Chris Marker's Remembrance of Things to Come

French writer Sidonie Gabrielle Colette (1873-1954) was both a popular and literary sensation. Known simply as Colette, she scandalized French society with her three marriages and her career as a racy music-hall performer and mime artist. She was also one of the finest prose stylists of her era, and a legendary figure in Paris. Her work often explored the struggle between independent identity and passionate love, and asserted female sexuality in a male-dominated world.

Colette won many awards for her work and was the first woman chosen as a member of France's prestigious Goncourt Academy. A prolific writer, her semi-autobiographical novels include the Claudine and Chéri series, as well as The Vagabond, Music-Hall Sidelights and Gigi (on which the Oscar-winning musical was based).

As she narrates the story herself, Colette looks back over her carefree childhood, the inspiration she drew from her rural homes, and her career as a performer. The film, which includes congenial conversations between her and acclaimed filmmaker and friend Jean Cocteau, shows a woman who may be near the end of her life but who remains dynamic and engaged - and occupied with needlepoint.

Filmmaker Yannick Bellon (who collaborated with Chris Marker on the recent release Remembrance of Things to Come - also distributed by First Run / Icarus Films), captures a rare moment with Colette, the literary icon, amidst the natural landscape of France. Bellon interprets Colette's narration visually, in images saturated with charm: from poetic montages of Mediterranean hillsides to collages of photographs rendering childhood memories and moments backstage. COLETTE is an intimate portrait of an artist as well as an expressive homage to her place in the artistic world.

"This video treasure... with delightful descriptions of the countryside and her life... is highly recommended." -Library Journal

"Yannick Bellon's competence allows her to stay invisible behind her subject with patient tact, sensitive intelligence, and even zeal. Thank you." - Le Cahiers du Cinéma

"The narrative, written and spoken by Colette, has all the savor of her best pages. With a film like this, the cinema is truly the "witness" of our times." - La Cinématographie Française

"Bellon set out to evoke the sense and sensibility not only of Colette but also Colette's writings. She succeeds." - Educational Media Reviews Online

"Well thought-out, richly illustrated. The proof that at the movies too, a short sonnet is worth more than a long poem." - Henry Magnan, Le Monde

2003 National Women's Studies Association Conference Film Festival
  

29 minutes / b&w
Release Date: 2003
Copyright Date: 1951
Sale: $298

This DVD is sold above with a license for institutional use and Public Performance rights. It is also available for home video use, click here.

Subject areas:
Art, Biographies, Black and White, France, French Culture, Literature, Theater, Western Europe, Women's Studies

Related Titles:
Marguerite, A Reflection of Herself: A personal portrait of the great French writer Marguerite Duras. Made with home moves, archives, film extracts, readings, and television interviews filmed over many years.

Remembrance of Things to Come: Reminiscent of Resnais, Ivens, even Kubrick, but in its deployment of still photographs (as in La Jetée), its theme of history and memory, its subject-skipping montage and rapid shuttle of wit and philosophy it's pure Marker.

Home | New | Titles | Subjects | PDFs | Weblog | Current Concerns | Ordering | Resources | Site Map   
About | Closed Captioned | Best Sellers | Study Guides | Postcards | Filmmakers | Screenings | RSS   
address
  
    Help
Copyright (c) 2008, Icarus Films
Last Updated January 30, 2009
Privacy Policy