Le roman d'un tricheur (Sacha Guitry, 1936)
- Michael Kerpan
- Spelling Bee Champeen
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Le roman d'un tricheur (Sacha Guitry, 1936)
A Japanese release by Kinokuniya (French with Japanese subtitles)
- Kinsayder
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The recent restored Gaumont French edition has optional English subs.
- Michael Kerpan
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Oops, didn't see the French DVD (IMDB seems to have changed the way it alerts one to what's available).Kinsayder wrote:The recent restored Gaumont French edition has optional English subs.
- Michael Kerpan
- Spelling Bee Champeen
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Jonathan S
- Joined: Sat Jun 07, 2008 7:31 am
- Location: Somerset, England
Does anyone else feel this film's unusual style may have influenced that other writer-director-actor-narrator, Orson Welles?
The trailer for Citizen Kane is done in a very similar manner to Tricheur's eccentric opening credits with both Welles and Guitry calling out to their actors, who appear to respond to the narrator. The closing technical credits on The Magnificent Ambersons are also reminiscent of Tricheur's although Guitry shows us the actual people, not just illustrations of their trade as Welles does.
More importantly, perhaps, Welles' narration in Ambersons - especially in the opening sequence - seems possibly inspired by Tricheur. Of course, Guitry uses the technique throughout his film and to such an extreme that he erases virtually all the other actors' voices with his own. Welles' narration amplifies his images where as Guitry all too often merely describes what we see on screen. That, for me, is a negation of cinema.
I'd wanted to see Tricheur for decades but when I finally did I found myself being hugely annoyed by its formal experimentation! It seems to me a failure for the same reason The Lady in the Lake - with its subjective camera throughout - is a failure; a particular style is applied constantly whether it's artistically appropriate or not, so it just becomes a gimmick.
I must admit I'd probably have enjoyed the film more if I were not reliant on the English subtitles, which almost never let up. Nor did I see the DVD, but the old Interama VHS tape - quite good quality, but so heavily pictureboxed that about one third of the available picture area is blank. Mr Tooze would keel over...
The trailer for Citizen Kane is done in a very similar manner to Tricheur's eccentric opening credits with both Welles and Guitry calling out to their actors, who appear to respond to the narrator. The closing technical credits on The Magnificent Ambersons are also reminiscent of Tricheur's although Guitry shows us the actual people, not just illustrations of their trade as Welles does.
More importantly, perhaps, Welles' narration in Ambersons - especially in the opening sequence - seems possibly inspired by Tricheur. Of course, Guitry uses the technique throughout his film and to such an extreme that he erases virtually all the other actors' voices with his own. Welles' narration amplifies his images where as Guitry all too often merely describes what we see on screen. That, for me, is a negation of cinema.
I'd wanted to see Tricheur for decades but when I finally did I found myself being hugely annoyed by its formal experimentation! It seems to me a failure for the same reason The Lady in the Lake - with its subjective camera throughout - is a failure; a particular style is applied constantly whether it's artistically appropriate or not, so it just becomes a gimmick.
I must admit I'd probably have enjoyed the film more if I were not reliant on the English subtitles, which almost never let up. Nor did I see the DVD, but the old Interama VHS tape - quite good quality, but so heavily pictureboxed that about one third of the available picture area is blank. Mr Tooze would keel over...
- perkizitore
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