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Criterion Close-Up – Episode 57 – French 1930’s Part 2: Early Jean Renoir
Criterion Close-Up
English - December 23, 2016 00:17 - 74 MB - ★★★★★ - 2 ratingsFilm History TV & Film Film Interviews blu-ray dvd criterion collection criterion criterioncast film cinema close-up Homepage Download Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed
Mark and Aaron continue the French 1930s series by exploring the early career of Jean Renoir.
Mark and Aaron continue the French 1930s series by exploring the early career of Jean Renoir, easily the most recognizable director from the period. We begin with the beginning, by looking at his origins and childhood. We look at his early silent films, his first sound adaptations, and a couple of films from the middle of the decade where he began to settle into his poetic realist style.
7:00 – Why Renoir?
9:30 – Origins of Renoir
20:00 – Silent Renoir (Catherine, Whirlpool of Fate, Nana, Charleston Parade, The Little Match Girl)
51:30 – Early Sound (On purge bébé, La Chienne, Boudu Saved From Drowning)
1:21:30 – Poetic Realism in Mid-Thirties (Toni, A Day in the Country)
French 1930s Episode 1
Jean Renoir Taschen book
Republic of Images
Renoir Paintings at the Art Institute of Chicago
DVD Beaver – Jean Renoir Collector’s Edition
Aaron West – A Day in the Country
David Blakeslee – A Day in the Country
Recommended Films
The Little Match Girl
La Chienne
Boudu Saved from Drowning
Toni
A Day in the Country
Episode Credits
Mark Hurne: Twitter | Letterboxd
Aaron West: Twitter | Blog | Letterboxd
Criterion Close-Up: Facebook | Twitter | Email
Next time on the podcast: Paul Thomas Anderson