Ángel Díaz’s documentary The Lost Sorrows of Jean Eustache, concentrates on Eustache as cinematic thinker and archivist of his own life. Actors read texts written by Eustache, including the following reflection: “The role of the author in cinema should be one of non-intervention.” This sentence reminds us that he belongs to the greatest of film traditions (he cites Griffith, Renoir, Dreyer, and Lang as his models), the one that sees cinema as a matter of placing the camera in front of reality and capturing it ardently, precisely, and without tricks.
Title | Jean Eustache's Wasted Breath |
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Year | 1997 |
Genre | Documentary |
Country | France |
Studio | Les Films du Poisson, La Sept-Arte |
Cast | Jean-Pierre Léaud, Françoise Lebrun, Boris Eustache, Sylvie Durastanti, Jean-Michel Barjol, Henri Martinez |
Crew | Angel Díez (Director), Jean-Pierre Ruh (Sound), Laetitia Gonzalez (Associate Producer), Philippe Théaudière (Cinematography), Yaël Fogiel (Producer), Angel Díez (Screenplay) |
Keyword | |
Release | May 14, 1997 |
Runtime | 54 minutes |
Quality | HD |
IMDb | 0.00 / 10 by 0 users |
Popularity | 2 |
Budget | 0 |
Revenue | 0 |
Language | Français |