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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Essential Viewing for That Certain Film Fan....,
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This review is from: Un chant d'amour (DVD)
Nice to have a really decent transfer of the Genet classic made available to a wide audience. The print I struggled to discern decades ago at Manhattan's Thalia was barely watchable; while hardly pristine, this DVD looks just fine. And the film itself is still remarkable, certainly one of the most influential of gay artworks. (Todd Haynes, Pierre et Gilles, Warhol -- the list of those who've aped Genet's imagery here is endless.) Suffice it to say, for most sophisticated audiences, many of the visuals here will seem familiar even the first time around. The commentary from Kenneth Anger's disappointing (when the guard brandishes his gun in the most obvious manner imaginable, Anger helpfully tells us the image is meant to be erotic -- thanks, Ken!) But the introduction from Jonas Mekas, where he tells how the picture was smuggled into New York in the 60's, is fascinating. Also included are two French interviews with Genet, which come guaranteed to cure the strongest case of insomnia -- he drones on with all the assurance of a figure whose every utterance has been hung upon by decades of Parisian intellectuals. Seeing him is interesting, but a little of these documentaries goes a very, very, veeerrryyyyy long way. All in all, though, a must see for Experimental Cinema 101.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Un Chant d'amour pour Genet,
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Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Un chant d'amour (DVD)
A masterpiece that should always be in our personal video library, a poem in the form of images, as they had predicted the Russian imagist of the 20s and the great poet and writer Jean Genet has discounted as no one else had managed for the first time in the 1950.
Only one negative post: this DVD version does not have the final with credits (date of release) written in chalk as the "overture" of the visual poem. But this DVD edition made amends to hold two precious interviews very hard to find, one of two particularly interesting and with a provocative approach to know part of the complex personality of the poet. Recommended to all lovers of poetry and avant-garde
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The bonus disk has two long interviews with Genet,
By Julie M. Vognar "Julie" (Berkeley, California United States) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Un chant d'amour (DVD)
The 1950 film itself is only 25 minutes long, and is about (as Anger tells us, unnecessarily) "how people are separated by walls." They fantasize about each other, or others, are miserable, cry, dream, dance around, masturbating--or just dancing--share the smoke of a cigarette through a tiny hole in a wall, rap messages, or simply noises, to each other. The film is set during a time when the guillotine was still the instrument of execution, and Anger points out that this may account for one man's rubbing his throat. Each man is alone in his prison cell, and one man's cell has a notice on the outside, saying that the occupant has been condemned to death. Have they all?
The actual silence (Genet wanted no music) seems appropriate. There is a recurring image of a short string of lovely white flowers, with, at first, a man's hand reaching for it, missing it, reaching for it, missing it; then in an outdoor fantasy, stroking the flowers which he he holds, and at the end, of the flowers being drawn, by some mysterious force, into the prison from the outside. Although there men cannot see each other, there is a frequently repeated motif of an eye to the hole in the door, watching, watching. The guard beats one of the men, and then forces his gun into the prisoner's mouth (immediately after the fantasy of one man laying another down gently in the woods, and undoing his belt). * The second disk has two LONG interviews with Genet, one made when he was 71 (and called an aut6obiography, but it is not as organized as that) and the second--in which he contradicts almost everything he said in the first!--when he was 72. For instance, in the first, he says he trained himself to feel so deeply, from earliest childhood, that there would be nothing he could do for a livelihood (besides steal) but write. In the second, when asked which book, or play, had given him the most trouble writing, he first names one book--I don't remember which--that he says gave him a little trouble, but mainly, he says "I wrote to get out of prison; writing was really boring." Um...yes. In the first, he rapsodizes about Greece, not only the men he knew there, but the ancient religion--"The Greeks are the only people who have gods they both worship and mock. The Jews could never do this to Yaweh; the Christians, never to Christ." In the second interview, he has little to say about God or gods, but seems to be terribly angry at all white men, "in whose skin I am trapped." It is all very interesting. Genet has eyes that are perfectly clear and pale, of a blue-gray-green-hazel-brown color, and quite small, at least as an old man. He chain smoked Galoises. Do I contradict myself? Very well, I contradict myself!
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