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Histoire(s) du cinma

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Wikipedia article




'Histoire(s) du cinma' is an 8-part video project begun by Jean-Luc Godard in the late 1980s and completed in 1998. The longest, at 266 minutes, and one of the most complex of Godard's films, 'Histoire(s) du cinma' is an examination of the history of the concept of cinema and how it relates to the 20th century; in this sense, it can also be considered a critique of the 20th century and how it perceives itself. The project is widely considered Godard's magnum opus.

'Histoire(s) du cinma' is always referred to by its French title, because of the untranslatable word play it implies: 'histoire' means both "history" and "story," and the 's' in parentheses gives the possibility of a plural. Therefore, the phrase 'Histoire(s) du cinma' simultaneously means 'The History of Cinema', 'Histories of Cinema', 'The Story of Cinema' and 'Stories of Cinema'. Similar double or triple meanings, as well as puns, are a recurring motif throughout 'Histoire(s)' and much of Godard's work.

The film was screened out of competition at the 1988 Cannes Film Festival. Nine years later, it was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1997 Festival.

The soundtrack was released as a 5-CD boxed set on the ECM record label.[https://www.prestomusic.com/classical/products/7963227--jean-luc-godard-histoire-s-du-cinema Presto Classical][https://www.newyorker.com/culture/richard-brody/language-games Language Games|The New Yorker][https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/19/arts/music/godard-classical-music-ecm.html Jean-Luc Godard Is, Quietly, a Probing Musical Mind The New York Times]

In 2012, it was voted the 48th greatest film of all time in a poll of film directors by 'Sight & Sound' magazine.[https://www.bfi.org.uk/news/50-greatest-films-all-time The top 50 Greatest Films of All Time|Sight & Sound|BFI]

Content



'Histoire(s) du cinma' is conceived as a cinematic painting that brings together the elements of the novel and of painting. As cinema, it constructs into one whole three interrelated directions of enquiry: what the century has done to cinema; what cinema has done to the century; what makes up the image (cinematic or otherwise) in general. Above and beyond its scholarly dimension, 'Histoire(s)' involves a positive project of the reinvention of cinema through the realization of Godard's earlier ideas on the history of cinema, and the cinematic modes of thought and history, along with establishing "metacinema" as a way to view the world, following Henri Bergson and Gilles Deleuze. At the same time, Godard seeks to push the limits of cinema in order to bring about his "videographic refashioning of cinema in the technical, ontological, and philosophical manners necessarily involves bringing cinema to its limits".

Episodes



'Histoire(s) du cinma' consists of 4 chapters, each one subdivided into two parts, making for a total of 8 episodes. The first two episodes, 'Toutes les histoires' (1988) and 'Une histoire seule' (1989) run 52 minutes and 42 minutes, respectively; the remaining 6 episodes, premiered 1997 - 1998, run under 40 minutes each.

* 'Chapter 1(a)' : 51 min.

** 'Toutes les histoires' (1988) - 'All the (Hi)stories'

* 'Chapter 1(b)' : 42 min.

** 'Une Histoire seule' (1989) - 'A Single (Hi)story'

* 'Chapter 2(a)' : 26 min.

** 'Seul le cinma' (1997) - 'Only Cinema'

* 'Chapter 2(b)' : 28 min.

** 'Fatale beaut' (1997) - 'Deadly Beauty'

* 'Chapter 3(a)' : 27 min.

** 'La Monnaie de labsolu' (1998) - 'The Coin of the Absolute'

* 'Chapter 3(b)' : 27 min.

** 'Une Vague Nouvelle' (1998) - 'A New Wave'

* 'Chapter 4(a)' : 27 min.

** 'Le Contrle de lunivers' (1998) - 'The Control of the Universe'

* 'Chapter 4(b)' : 38 min.

** 'Les Signes parmi nous' (1998) - 'The Signs Among Us'

Films referenced and quoted



'Histoire(s) du cinma' is composed almost entirely of visual and auditory quotations from films, some famous and some obscure.

The sources of referenced films and literary quotations are delineated chronologically by the film critic Cline Scemama-Heard, the author of 'Histoire(s) du cinma de Jean-Luc Godard. La force faible dun art'.Scemama-Heard, Cline, [http://cri-image.univ-paris1.fr/celine/celinegodard.html La partition des Histoire(s) du cinma de Jean-Luc Godard], available on the site of [http://cri-image.univ-paris1.fr/accueil.html Centre de Recherche sur l'Image] (CRI), Paris

This is a partial list of works Godard drew upon to create the project; a complete list would number hundreds of entries.

* 'An American in Paris'

* 'The Barefoot Contessa'

* 'Bicycle Thieves'

* 'The Docks of New York'

* 'The Green Ray'

* 'A King in New York'

* 'Man Hunt'

* 'Notorious'

* 'The Night of the Hunter'

* 'Only Angels Have Wings'

* 'The Passion of Joan of Arc', which Godard had featured earlier in 'Vivre Sa Vie'

* 'Rear Window'

* 'Scarface'

* 'Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs'

* 'Teorema'

* 'Zro de conduite'

Reception



Critical reception for 'Histoire(s) du cinma' has been highly positive. Marjorie Baumgarten, reviewing for the 'Austin Chronicle' said: "Few filmmakers would be able to mount a discourse on the 20th century's art and thought process as broad and extensive as this". Australian film critic Adrian Martin, in a four-star review, commented: "It is the form of this remembered, necessarily scrappy, haunted, sad history which Godard evokes in all the prodigious techniques of his 'Histoire(s) du cinma'." Calling it an "intellectual striptease", 'New York Times' film critic Dave Kehr wrote: "Perhaps, like Joyces 'Finnegans Wake', this is not a work to be read but a work to be read in: to be picked up and put down, sampled and considered, over a period of time. Jean-Luc Godard took 30 years to compose his 'Histoire(s)'. It might take just as long to absorb it." Jonathan Rosenbaum in the 'Chicago Reader' agreed, stating: "For better and for worse, it's comparable to James Joyce's 'Finnegans Wake' in both its difficulty and its playfulness". In the academic journal 'Film Quarterly', James S. Williams described the project as "Godards gift to us: a threnody of love" and as offering "irrefutable proof" that "the forms of artthe forms that thinkcan help lay the basis for new forms of being". Alifeleti Brown, writing for 'Senses of Cinema', praised the series as being "Godards most devastating accomplishment as filmmaker/critic/artist/poet/historian". Michael Wood compared the series to an "archaeology of mind, the apparently disordered rescue of a lifetimes memory of film" in a piece for the 'London Review of Books'

Availability



It was released on DVD by Olive Films on December 6, 2011.[https://www.slantmagazine.com/dvd/histoires-du-cinema/ DVD Review on Slate Magazine]

See also



*'The Story of Film', a 2011 documentary film by Mark Cousins similar in content

* Cinephilia

* French New Wave

Notes



References



Further reading



* Scemama-Heard, Cline, 'Histoire(s) du cinma de Jean-Luc Godard. La force faible dun art', LHarmattan, Paris, 2006.

*Kim, Jihoon. "Video, the Cinematic, and the Post-Cinematic: On Jean-Luc Godard's Histoire(s) Du Cinma." 'Journal of Film and Video', vol. 70, no. 2, 2018, pp. 320'.'


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