Straub & Huillet on DVD

Discuss internationally-released DVDs and Blu-rays or other international DVD and Blu-ray-related topics.
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denti alligator
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#26 Post by denti alligator » Mon Dec 08, 2008 10:19 am

Dr. Strangelove wrote:Here are some screenshots of the third Montparnasse set "Danièle Huillet & Jean-Marie Straub volume 3". All films are letterboxed and have optional french subtitles.
Thanks. Where did you get your copy? Amazon.fr appears not to carry it.

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Zazou dans le Metro
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#27 Post by Zazou dans le Metro » Mon Dec 08, 2008 11:19 am

denti alligator wrote:
Dr. Strangelove wrote:Here are some screenshots of the third Montparnasse set "Danièle Huillet & Jean-Marie Straub volume 3". All films are letterboxed and have optional french subtitles.
Thanks. Where did you get your copy? Amazon.fr appears not to carry it.
Here

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denti alligator
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#28 Post by denti alligator » Mon Dec 08, 2008 11:25 am

Exactly. I have to buy it from a third-party seller, pay VAT, and ridiculous shipping. It would be half the price from amazon.fr. Other sellers with better prices? I need this set!

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Zazou dans le Metro
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#29 Post by Zazou dans le Metro » Mon Dec 08, 2008 11:46 am

denti alligator wrote:Exactly. I have to buy it from a third-party seller, pay VAT, and ridiculous shipping. It would be half the price from amazon.fr. Other sellers with better prices? I need this set!
Don't get shirty with me pal, I thought you couldn't find the listing. Maybe you'll be sweetened by its availability at alapage for 33 euros??

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Dr. Strangelove
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#30 Post by Dr. Strangelove » Mon Dec 08, 2008 2:40 pm

denti alligator wrote:Thanks. Where did you get your copy? Amazon.fr appears not to carry it.
Amazon seems to have delivery problems. Another option would be to order it from fnac, but they have high delivery costs (e.g. 8,30 € from France to Germany).

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Tutut
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#31 Post by Tutut » Mon Dec 08, 2008 5:11 pm

Dr. Strangelove wrote:Amazon seems to have delivery problems. Another option would be to order it from fnac, but they have high delivery costs (e.g. 8,30 € from France to Germany).
Alapage is expensive for one item, but the shipping fees for Germany are 10.80€ for an order from 0 to 100€, or 14.40€ from 100 to 200€ amount.
It would be a good way for you if you're planning to order more than one title from France.

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accatone
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#32 Post by accatone » Mon Mar 09, 2009 1:14 pm

Previously available through the Montparnasse Edition - now available in Germany alongside the original script and shooting shedule: NICHT VERSÖHNT ODER ES HILFT NUR GEWALT, WO GEWALT HERRSCHT - VON JEAN-MARIE STRAUB UND DANIÈLE HUILLET through VDG Weimar (new to me!)

I actually think about double dipping here to give this company a shot…

max_cherry
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#33 Post by max_cherry » Wed Jan 06, 2010 1:24 pm

Maybe this will add something new to the discussion...

3 films by Jean-Marie Straub and Daniele Huillet on DVD in February

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who is bobby dylan
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#34 Post by who is bobby dylan » Tue Jan 26, 2010 12:27 pm

Got this reply to an email to New Wave Films about further Straub & Huillet releases:

"It depends how this first release does – if it does OK, then we would plan to do some more – probably Not Reconciled plus something more recent and some shorts, but which titles exactly is undecided at the moment. In France they got state support to do the complete works, here we have to be more picky..."

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Svevan
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#35 Post by Svevan » Wed Mar 10, 2010 7:31 pm

Have we heard anything about the picture/audio quality on the New Wave discs?

edit: In the New Wave thread, linked for reference.

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Svevan
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#36 Post by Svevan » Wed Mar 10, 2010 10:37 pm

Is there any way to see the 20 minute dutch documentary from the New Yorker disc online?

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tout va bien
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#37 Post by tout va bien » Mon Mar 15, 2010 11:14 pm

this is about to be released, through Intermedio. same as Montparnasse Editions, but i hope with spanish subs...and two more packs to be confirmed (6, they say!)

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zedz
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#38 Post by zedz » Thu Sep 23, 2010 9:21 pm

In the absence of a general Straub / Huillet thread, this seemed to be the best place to post.

Class Relations

I decided to go the whole hog for my first viewing of this film, on the fine Filmmuseum disc. Since Huillet & Straub are so concerned with the adaptation and translation of texts, I decided that I ought to read Kafka’s The Man Who Disappeared immediately before watching their version of the novel. It certainly made the experience all the more rewarding and fascinating, so here’s a report back.

Fidelity & Lacunae

Class Relations is an extraordinarily faithful adaptation of Kafka’s text. Although the text is filleted and condensed for the screen and there are some meaningful omissions, it seems that every scene and every line of dialogue in the film is taken directly from the book – though bear in mind that I’m comparing one translated text (the novel in English) with another (the subtitled film).

And so, what is left out of the translation between media becomes very important. Primarily, this is the narration. Straub / Huillet’s film is doggedly materialist. Though they faithfully reproduce the actions and words of Kafka’s characters, they stay well clear of their thoughts and other elements of narration. This automatically casts certain sequences in different lights. For example, when Karl is imprisoned in the apartment at the end of the film, we observe his attempted escape, but the preamble to this, his attitude towards Delamarche and his determination to escape, are elided. For similar reasons, the text of the (narratively important) letter from Karl’s uncle which sends him on his merry way is omitted. The letter is read onscreen, but not out loud, because Karl does not do so in the novel.

Other sequences or parts of sequences are left out, either for reasons of economy, be it financial (the political demonstration observed from a balcony, which would entail quadrupling the film’s cast) or narrative (Karl’s journey to and arrival in Clayton), and these lacunae are not papered over with exposition.

The film thus becomes, very consciously, a film of gaps, and these gaps are very artfully nested. I strongly suspect that this is the reason for the notoriously partial subtitles the Filmmuseum DVD sports – the need to instil in viewers the understanding that they’re not getting the whole picture. In fact, the subtitles are incomplete rather than sparse. Most of the film’s exchanges are translated fully and conscientiously, but in every scene a few lines are deliberately left untranslated. So I don’t think it’s correct to assume that this approach to subtitling was taken primarily to ‘free up’ the viewer’s eyes, as the subs come thick and fast for much of the film. Instead, the intended effect seems to be to continually remind the viewer of the gaps in the film, something that’s part of Class Relations’ deep structure: the subtitles convey only a portion of the film’s text, just as the film’s text conveys only a portion of the novel’s, and the novel itself conveys only a portion of the idealized, unfinished The Man Who Disappeared. At each level of adaptation and translation, more of the text disappears.

Viewers of the film may have trouble following the elliptical narrative, but without reference to the text, they won’t know at what level of translation each particular lacuna was introduced.

There may be an assumption, for instance, that the untranslated lines of dialogue contain some missing explanation (though most of the missing exchanges are phatic – there’s actually very little lost information of significance), but key information is also lost through the rigour of Straub / Huillet’s materialist approach (e.g. the uncle’s letter); through the necessary elision of parts of sequences (e.g. Karl’s reunion with Giacomo in the final sequence, something that occurs without comment in the film); and through the parts of the novel that went unfinished or unfound (Karl’s escape from Brunelda and Delamarche; the open ending). Viewers of the film unfamiliar with the novel will not be aware that the fragmentary non sequiturs of the film’s final sequences are actually faithful renditions of the novel’s partial remnants, not an arty imposition on the part of the filmmakers.

Filmic Differences

Well, that’s enough about what Huillet and Straub took away from the text: what did they add? There are distinct differences in some of the narrative’s actions, but these tend to be minor and pragmatic. For example, when Karl is beaten after his attempted escape, rather than having him wake in the darkness with a bandaged head and make his way to the balcony, he is simply dumped, unconscious and unbandaged, on the balcony in the first place. These minor compressions are interesting, but not particularly significant.

More substantial, for me, was the – again, pragmatic – decision to eschew Kafka’s world of darkness and grime in favour of stark, neutral spaces. Sequences which in the novel unfold in near darkness, such as Karl’s departure from Klara’s room in Pollunder’s mansion, are inevitably better lit in the film, and the film’s spaces are drabber and more mundane than the sometimes nightmarish or fantastical ones of the novel. Hence, no doubt, the elision of the novel’s most visually outrageous sequence, Karl’s encounter with the pedestalled angels. These changes are symptomatic of Straub / Huillet’s dry, transparent approach to adaptation, and they serve to give prominence to the text and to certain select visual elements, notably gesture.

The other big change that has been wrought is the title. Kafka’s original title is itself contingent. Der Verschollene was his working title, but Kafka also referred to the unfinished novel as The Stoker and his ‘American novel’, and it was originally published as Amerika, so it’s fair enough that they chose their own title. But ‘Class Relations’ is nothing if not pointed. The motor of the novel’s plot is job anxiety, and it’s this that drives Karl on through his picaresque adventures or persuades him to stay in place for a time. Huillet and Straub astutely cut to the chase in laying bare the mechanism behind the mechanism, and this simple act provides a new and revealing frame for the text.

victoriaw

Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#39 Post by victoriaw » Wed Feb 02, 2011 12:24 pm

Did anyone see the VOL 4 & 5? They are 31,25€ and 44,21€ on Fnac... too expensive. Anyone found a better price?

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otis
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#40 Post by otis » Wed Feb 02, 2011 1:49 pm

Amazon.it has got them significantly cheaper. Don't know what they charge for postage.

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NABOB OF NOWHERE
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#41 Post by NABOB OF NOWHERE » Fri Sep 21, 2012 1:30 pm

Volume 7 is out Half price on Amazon.it

accatone
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#42 Post by accatone » Sun Apr 24, 2016 1:34 pm

https://www.filmmuseum.at/shop/jeanmari ... le_huillet" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

Great book release, all text in engl. language.

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Cronenfly
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#43 Post by Cronenfly » Fri Jan 13, 2017 3:51 pm

As a neophyte to Straub-Huillet, I was wondering if anyone could provide some recommendations for TIFF's forthcoming retrospective? I'm definitely going to Class Relations, but other than Anna Magdalena Bach the rest of the films are pretty much unknown to me, and any guidance would be much appreciated. The listings appear through the link if you look for Not Reconciled under series.

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TMDaines
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#44 Post by TMDaines » Fri Jan 13, 2017 6:06 pm

I really like Sicilia!

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AlexHansen
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#45 Post by AlexHansen » Fri Jan 13, 2017 6:23 pm

The program with Genou d'Artemide, Jean Bricard, and the Witches would be a good choice, as would the Black Sin + shorts.

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Knife Eater
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#46 Post by Knife Eater » Mon Jan 16, 2017 11:14 pm

I managed to catch a number of their films when the "Not Reconciled" retrospective played at the Harvard Film Archive this past fall. I was especially taken with their Antigone, which uses their stylistic trademarks in service of an exhilarating, passionate denunciation of the justifications used for war. (Exhilarating wasn't the kind of word I'd expected to use in reference to their work, so this film was especially eye-opening.)

I also can't recommend their Schoenberg adaptations (Introduction to Arnold Schoenberg's "Accompaniment to a Cinematographic Scene", Moses and Aaron, From Today Until Tomorrow) enough.


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Oedipax
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#48 Post by Oedipax » Wed Apr 19, 2017 11:09 am

Incredible acquisition - I hope they will issue blu-rays of all these films and not just go the streaming route exclusively.

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knives
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#49 Post by knives » Wed Apr 19, 2017 12:49 pm

So amazing. I never thought such a thing would happen especially with New Yorker being such a train wreck. That it seems to include even the post Huillet films is even more exciting.

beamish13
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Re: Straub & Huillet on DVD

#50 Post by beamish13 » Wed Apr 19, 2017 1:37 pm

wow, this is great! Not Reconciled is incredibly demanding, even at just 50 some minutes in length, and I can't wait to rewatch it.

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