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Synopsis

Ame d’artiste is Dulac’s biggest-budget commercial melodrama, made in the wake of the success of The Smiling Madame Beudet. According to French film historian Richard Abel, it was France’s first modern studio spectacular, with an international cast and crew, set in London, and shot almost entirely in the studio with elaborate sets and complex scenes such as a masked ball. After the opening scene of domestic violence (a wife is about to stab her drunken husband) is revealed to be a play, the film continues to explore the havoc wrought by passion in the off-stage life of the famous actress, her ardent admirer who is also an unrecognized playwright, and his wife. The male characters with their possessive love are juxtaposed with the women, who are willing to sacrifice either themselves or their desire, and who, as in other Dulac films, ultimately show solidarity with each other. By the end, the conjugal status quo is reestablished, but with a hint of irony, and Helen, our heroine, vows to devote herself exclusively to her art. —Irina Leimbacher

Director

Original

Germaine Dulac

Germaine Dulac (17 November 1882, Amiens, France – 20 July 1942, Paris) was a French film director and early film theorist. Famously, she directed The Seashell and the Clergyman (1928), based on a scenario by Antonin Artaud. This film has been credited as the first surrealist film, released shortly before Un Chien Andalou (1929) by Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí. However, other scholars, including Ephraim Katz, consider her an Impressionist filmmaker.

In 1920, at the height of the film Avant-Garde movement, its only female member Germaine Dulac released her tenth film La Belle Dame Sans Merci, which she wrote in collaboration with her friend Irene Hillel-Erlanger, a surrealist poet also known as Claude Lorey. In Hillel-Erlanger’s words La Belle Dame Sans Merci is “une histoire comme il y en a dans la vie de chacun de nous… riche de ces chocs et mouvements intimes qui bouleversent les coeurs et les ames”. This definition is evocative of melodrama… read more

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