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Synopsis

Peter Greenaway’s fascinating essay on death and revolution is set in the period between April 1795 and September 1801, when over 300 bodies were pulled from the River Seine in Paris. Two mortuary attendants dutifully noted the condition of each body in great detail, including their clothing, possessions and wounds. This bounty of information is the basis for Greenaway’s structuralist speculation on the lives of these corpses and their relationship to the French Revolution. —Facets

Director

Original

Peter Greenaway

An avant-gardist who earned surprising access to the mainstream, Peter Greenaway is among the most ambitious and controversial filmmakers of his era. Trained as a painter and heavily influenced by theories of structural linguistics, ethnography, and philosophy, Greenaway’s films traversed often unprecedented ground, consistently exploring the boundaries of the medium by rejecting formal narrative structures in favor of awe-striking imagery, shifting meanings, and mercurial emotional tension; fascinated by formal symmetries and parallels, his material displayed an almost obsessive interest in list-making and cataloguing, earning equal notoriety for its provocative eroticism as well as its almost self-conscious pretentiousness. Born April 5, 1942, in Newport, Wales, Greenaway was raised primarily in nearby Chingford. After deciding at the age of 12 to become a painter, he entered the Walthamstow College of Art. By 1965, Greenaway had begun working as a film editor for the Central Office… read more

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