Les Enfants Du Paradis (Bfi Film Classics)
Editorial Reviews
Book Description
Illustrated Les enfants du paradis, a magnificent picaresque saga of parisian street life and popular culture, has been called the greatest film ever made. Completed during the occupation, it nevertheless boasted the largest set ever to have been built in a French studio, a crowd of extras and, under the direction of Marcel Carne, some of the most accomplished technicians and actors available (including Arletty and Jean-Louis Barrault as the central couple doomed to remain apart).
Jill Forbes examines how, at a time of crisis, the film reimagined the history of France. Although les Enfants du paradis is escapist, even fantastic, Forbes finds in it a radical, counter-cultural sensibility concerned with destabilising social hierarchies and prescribed sexual roles and questioning the opposition between life and art.
About the Author
Jill Forbes is Ashley Watkins Professor of French at the University of Bristol and author of The Cinema in France: After the New Wave (BFI/Macmillan)
Les Enfants Du Paradis (Bfi Film Classics),Jill Forbes,British Film Institute,0851703658,Enfants du paradis (Motion pic,Enfants du paradis (Motion picture),Film & Video - History & Criticism,Film Criticism,Performing Arts,Performing Arts/Dance,Pop Arts / Pop Culture
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