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Grin Without a Cat

Le fond de l'air est rouge

France

1977

240 Min
Color, Black and White
1.33:1
English, German, Spanish, Vietnamese, French, Japanese
  • Currently 4.5/5 Stars.
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DIR Chris Marker

SCR Chris Marker

DP Pierre-William Glenn, Willy Kurant

CAST Laurence Guvillier, Davos Hanich, François Maspero, Yves Montand, François Périer

ED Chris Marker

MUSIC Luciano Berio

Cine//B (Foco Pirata: 1D 7H 43M Chris Marker)

Synopsis

Chris Marker’s remarkable documentary about the rise and fall of the New Left in the 1960s and 1970s was originally released in 1977, but was reworked in 1993 in the wake of the Cold War’s end and the collapse of the Soviet Union. A Grin Without a Cat (the idiomatic French title, Le fond de l’air est rouge, can be literally translated as The Essence of the Air is Red) is divided into two parts. The first part, called “Fragile Hands,” focuses on the emergence of leftist movements circa 1967, the Vietnam War serving as the lightning rod for radicals of all stripes to come together to agitate for their utopian dreams. The second part, entitled “Severed Hands,” details the slow demise of the invigorated left, from forces within (the discord between different factions) and without (the role of the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. in keeping the countries in their backyards in line). This three-hour epic offers a stunning assemblage of period footage. For younger viewers, excerpts of iconic historical figures such as Fidel Castro, Che Guevarra, Mao Tse-tung, and Salvador Allende should be particularly eye-opening. For all its expansiveness, A Grin Without a Cat flits by with blithe disregard for the audience’s level of acquaintance with the events and figures discussed. Consequently, viewers well-versed in the history of the period might find Marker’s essay on the New Left more fulfilling than those without any background on the subject.

Director

Original

Chris Marker

“I write to you from a far-off country…”

Information regarding the early life of Chris Marker, photographer, filmmaker, videographer, poet, journalist, multimedia/installation artist, designer, and world traveler, is scarce and conflicting. The year to which his movies, videos, and multimedia projects are dated depends on which source you use, and in which country you live. Personal data is in a state of complete disarray: Derek Malcolm, writing about ¡Cuba Sí! (1961) for The Guardian, reports that Marker was born in Mongolia, of aristocratic descent. Geoff Andrew of Time Out London isn’t sure (Andrew, 146), and most sources, along with the Internet Movie Database, use the location I’ve listed above as his place of birth. Some say his father was an American soldier, others that he (Marker) was a paratrooper in the Second World War. Still others, that he comes to us from an alien planet. Or the future. Throughout his career, he has rarely been interviewed, and even more rarely… read more

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Displaying 2 wall posts.
Picture of Miguel Ferreira

Miguel Ferreira

14Apr12

I loved this, how can I call it, essay. Marker is an awsome documentarist, this movie is pure history (de un fracaso global...), is the world, I really learned a lot. And (wooohooo) it has Monsieur Godard filming the students revolution! I saw the 180 minutes version, would like to see the other one, is it worth it?

Picture of Lefteris Becerra

Lefteris Becerra

13Apr12

crónica de un fracaso global que tiñe el aire de sangre...

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un basurero llamado historia

By Lefteri​s Becerra on April 13, 2012

maravilloso ensayo fílmico. tiene momentos realmente estupendos en los que la agudeza de marker hace que el contacto de las imágenes con los sonidos y sus comentarios oportunos, saquen chispas como…  read review

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