Learn from and continue the legacy of this influential French director.
In honor of Rialto’s re-release of the 1956 masterpiece Bob le Flambeur, it’s time to look to Jean-Pierre Melville for some overdue filmmaking tips. The French cinema icon remains one of the most influential directors of all time — during his lifetime he helped pave the way for the French New Wave, and in recent years his legacy can be seen in the works of Jim Jarmusch, Johnny To, Edgar Wright, and many others.
Most people today learn from Melville by watching his films. Regarding the filmmaker’s inspiration on his own movies, Quentin Tarantinosaid in an interview:
“You get a sense — there’s like an aesthetic working in Melville’s work that you get a sense that you don’t have to know how to make a movie. If you truly love cinema with all your heart and with enough passion, you can’t help but make a good movie. You don’t have to go to school. You don’t have to know a lens — you know, a 40 and a 50 and a — fuck all that shit — crossing the line — none of that shit’s important. If you just truly love cinema with enough passion, and you really love it, then you can’t help but make a good movie.”
But Melville knew plenty. And analyzing the work, as video essays do lately, isn’t the same as getting advice and lessons directly from the source. Unfortunately, the best books to glean from, such as “Melville and Melville,” aren’t as easy to come by in the US right now. We’ve done our best to share the usual six tips, though, and maybe they can help you become the next great revisionist master of genre cinema.
“A Film is First and Foremost a Dream“
As the forebear to New Wave filmmakers like Jean-Luc Godard, Melville is associated with taking that same hand-held, on-location, sort of documentary approach to filmmaking. But he was anything but a realist. Here’s one of his most shared quotes, the source of which we’re uncertain, regarding his preference for the fantastic:
“I’m not interested in realism. All my films hinge on the fantastic. I’m not a documentarian; a film is first and foremost a dream, and it’s absurd to copy life in an attempt to produce an exact re-creation of it. Transposition is more or less a reflex with me: I move from realism to fantasy without the spectator ever noticing.”
“Your First Film Should Be Made With Your Own Blood.”
Tarantino’s assumption about Melville is partly right about his early films, which were made without formal training or adherence to any rules. In the below interview, conducted in the remains of his burned down studio, Melville talks of just getting stock for his camera and going out and filming and learning while he went, which is what any first timer should do.
0 comments:
Post a Comment