Eclipse Series 43: Agnès Varda in California
- swo17
- Bloodthirsty Butcher
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Eclipse Series 43: Agnès Varda in California
Eclipse Series 43: Agnès Varda in California
The legendary French filmmaker Agnès Varda, whose remarkable career began in the 1950s and has continued into the twenty-first century, produced some of her most provocative works while living on the West Coast of the United States. After temporarily relocating from France to California in the late sixties with her husband, Jacques Demy, so that he could make his first Hollywood film, Varda became entranced by the politics, youth culture, and sunshine of the San Francisco and Los Angeles areas, and created documentary explorations and fictional narratives—sometimes within the same film. She returned a decade later, and made more fascinating portraits of outsiderness. Her five revealing, entertaining California films, encompassing shorts and features, are collected in this set, which demonstrates that Varda was as deft an artist in unfamiliar terrain as she was on her own turf.
Uncle Yanco
In her effervescent first California film, Agnès Varda delves into her own family history. The short documentary Uncle Yanco features Varda tracking down a Greek emigrant relative she's never met, discovering an artist and kindred soul living a bohemian life in Sausalito.
Black Panthers
Agnès Varda turns her camera on an Oakland demonstration against the imprisonment of activist and Black Panthers cofounder Huey P. Newton. In addition to demonstrating Varda's fascination with her adopted surroundings and her empathetic humanity, this perceptive short is also a powerful and political sign of the times.
Lions Love (...and Lies)
Agnès Varda goes to Los Angeles, taking New York counterculture with her. In a rented house in the sun-soaked Hollywood hills, a woman and two men—Viva, of Warhol Factory fame, and James Rado and Gerome Ragni, who created and starred in the rock musical Hair—delight in each others' bodies while musing on love, stardom, and politics. They are soon joined by underground director Shirley Clarke, playing herself as well as functioning as a surrogate for Varda. Lions Love (...and Lies) is a metacinematic inquiry into the alternating currents of whimsy and tragedy that typified late sixties America.
Mur Murs
After returning to Los Angeles from France in 1979, Agnès Varda created this kaleidoscopic documentary about the striking murals that decorate the city. Bursting with color and vitality, Mur Murs is as much an invigorating study of community and diversity as it is an essential catalog of unusual public art.
Documenteur
This small-scale fiction about a divorced mother and her child (played by Agnès Varda's own son) leading a quiet existence on L.A.'s margins was made directly after Mur Murs, and though Documenteur is different in form and tone from that film, the two are complexly interwoven, with overlapping images and ideas. This meditative portrait of urban isolation overflows with subtle visual poetry.
The legendary French filmmaker Agnès Varda, whose remarkable career began in the 1950s and has continued into the twenty-first century, produced some of her most provocative works while living on the West Coast of the United States. After temporarily relocating from France to California in the late sixties with her husband, Jacques Demy, so that he could make his first Hollywood film, Varda became entranced by the politics, youth culture, and sunshine of the San Francisco and Los Angeles areas, and created documentary explorations and fictional narratives—sometimes within the same film. She returned a decade later, and made more fascinating portraits of outsiderness. Her five revealing, entertaining California films, encompassing shorts and features, are collected in this set, which demonstrates that Varda was as deft an artist in unfamiliar terrain as she was on her own turf.
Uncle Yanco
In her effervescent first California film, Agnès Varda delves into her own family history. The short documentary Uncle Yanco features Varda tracking down a Greek emigrant relative she's never met, discovering an artist and kindred soul living a bohemian life in Sausalito.
Black Panthers
Agnès Varda turns her camera on an Oakland demonstration against the imprisonment of activist and Black Panthers cofounder Huey P. Newton. In addition to demonstrating Varda's fascination with her adopted surroundings and her empathetic humanity, this perceptive short is also a powerful and political sign of the times.
Lions Love (...and Lies)
Agnès Varda goes to Los Angeles, taking New York counterculture with her. In a rented house in the sun-soaked Hollywood hills, a woman and two men—Viva, of Warhol Factory fame, and James Rado and Gerome Ragni, who created and starred in the rock musical Hair—delight in each others' bodies while musing on love, stardom, and politics. They are soon joined by underground director Shirley Clarke, playing herself as well as functioning as a surrogate for Varda. Lions Love (...and Lies) is a metacinematic inquiry into the alternating currents of whimsy and tragedy that typified late sixties America.
Mur Murs
After returning to Los Angeles from France in 1979, Agnès Varda created this kaleidoscopic documentary about the striking murals that decorate the city. Bursting with color and vitality, Mur Murs is as much an invigorating study of community and diversity as it is an essential catalog of unusual public art.
Documenteur
This small-scale fiction about a divorced mother and her child (played by Agnès Varda's own son) leading a quiet existence on L.A.'s margins was made directly after Mur Murs, and though Documenteur is different in form and tone from that film, the two are complexly interwoven, with overlapping images and ideas. This meditative portrait of urban isolation overflows with subtle visual poetry.
Re: Eclipse Series 43: Agnès Varda in California
I'm assuming that the interview filmed with Varda shortly ago will end up being posted online, similar to the interview between Robert Downey Sr. and Paul Thomas Anderson.
- Svevan
- Joined: Mon Nov 22, 2004 7:49 pm
- Location: Portland, OR
Re: Eclipse Series 43: Agnès Varda in California
Lions Love is fantastic, essential Varda. This is an exciting set!
- Aunt Peg
- Joined: Fri Dec 21, 2012 5:30 am
Re: Eclipse Series 43: Agnès Varda in California
Yes, I agree. Can't wait to get this box set.Svevan wrote:Lions Love is fantastic, essential Varda. This is an exciting set!
- ptatler
- Joined: Mon Nov 24, 2008 2:08 pm
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Re: Eclipse Series 43: Agnès Varda in California
Really looking forward to this set. The Gorin might be my favorite Eclipse and this seems to be cut from the same cloth.
One odd thing: is this the first Eclipse they've assigned spine numbers to?
One odd thing: is this the first Eclipse they've assigned spine numbers to?
- danieltiger
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Re: Eclipse Series 43: Agnès Varda in California
That looks like a bug to me. I really doubt there will be a #4303 on the side of Lions Love (. . . and Lies).ptatler wrote:Really looking forward to this set. The Gorin might be my favorite Eclipse and this seems to be cut from the same cloth.
One odd thing: is this the first Eclipse they've assigned spine numbers to?
- ptatler
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Re: Eclipse Series 43: Agnès Varda in California
Yeah. It's already gone. Nothing to see here...danieltiger wrote:That looks like a bug to me.
- NABOB OF NOWHERE
- Joined: Thu Sep 01, 2005 12:30 pm
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Re: Eclipse Series 43: Agnès Varda in California
Is it such a hard and fast rule for Eclipse sets not having supplements that has prevented the readily available bonus intros and interviews from the Tamaris set not being included?
- ptatler
- Joined: Mon Nov 24, 2008 2:08 pm
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Re: Eclipse Series 43: Agnès Varda in California
Yeah. Not to mention Criterion's own online-only supplements (P.T. Anderson and Robert Downey Sr.). I mean, even on a DVD, we're not talking about a whole lot of extra space being taken.
- Michael Kerpan
- Spelling Bee Champeen
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Re: Eclipse Series 43: Agnès Varda in California
Working my way through. Enjoyed Uncle Yanco and Mur Murs quite a bit. Black Panthers was interesting as a historical curio (but not very ccharacteristic of her overall work).
- barryconvex
- billy..biff..scooter....tommy
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- Location: NYC
Re: Eclipse Series 43: Agnès Varda in California
working my way through the 3 discs as well. Uncle Yanco is a brilliant short about a great unsung artist. i hope his work is preserved somewhere-it really is amazing. Documenteur so far is the real winner of the set for me (although i've yet to watch Mur Murs and Lions...was excellent as well) it caught me somewhat off guard with it's moving portrait of a mother and child trying to eke out a life in the unglamorous parts of LA. Not sure what i was expecting but this one really got to me. Great performance by Varda's son and Sabine Mamou as his mother. This set cements Varda as one of the all time directors for me...