Podcast: Download (Duration: 1:34:38 — 86.6MB)
This podcast focuses on Criterion’s Eclipse Series of DVDs. Hosts David Blakeslee and Trevor Berrett give an overview of each box and offer their perspectives on the unique treasures they find inside. In this first episode of a two-part series, David and Trevor are joined by Aaron West to discuss two films (David Golder and Poil de carotte) from Eclipse Series 44: Julien Duvivier in the Thirties.
About the films:
Remembered primarily for directing the classic crime drama Pépé le moko, Julien Duvivier was one of the finest filmmakers working in France in the 1930s. Thanks to a formidable innate understanding of the cinematic medium, Duvivier made the transition from silents to talkies with ease, marrying his expressive camera work to a strikingly inventive use of sound with a singular dexterity. His deeply shadowed, fatalistic early sound films David Golder and La tête d’un homme anticipate the poetic realist style that would come to define the decade in French cinema and, together with the small-town family drama Poil de Carotte and the swooning tale of love and illusion Un carnet de bal, showcase his stunning versatility. These four films—all featuring the great stage and screen actor Harry Baur—are collected here, each evidence of an immense and often overlooked cinematic talent.
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Episode Links
Julien Duvivier
Box Set Reviews
- Cagey Films
- Criterion Confessions
- DVDBlu Review
- DVD Talk
- Marvel Presents Salò
- New York Times
- PopMatters
- Slant
- Streamline
David Golder
- New York Times (1932)
- Film Alert 101
- TCM
Poil de carotte
Next time on the podcast: Eclipse Series 44: Julien Duvivier in the Thirties [Part 2]