L'Argent is one of his best, isn't it? I was heistant after Le diable probablement, but this is much more enjoyable.
― glumdalclitch, Tuesday, 6 February 2018 16:17 (eight years ago)
Yep. I bought the Criterion last year, a rarity these days.
― morning wood truancy (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 6 February 2018 16:18 (eight years ago)
Saw this image on Facebook today - Tarkovsky, Welles, Bresson at Cannes in 1983
https://www.google.co.uk/url?sa=i&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=images&cd=&ved=2ahUKEwjK9cD_2JHZAhVM6aQKHbOoCCAQjRx6BAgAEAY&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.pinterest.com%2Fpin%2F790663278303356930%2F&psig=AOvVaw0x-SOHD5705p6ADOBKcCom&ust=1518020338204499
― Agharta Christie (Ward Fowler), Tuesday, 6 February 2018 16:21 (eight years ago)
Reading Bresson's Notes on the Cinematograph, which is half great advice and half "wow, this guy is a massive asshole"
― flappy bird, Wednesday, 14 November 2018 21:12 (seven years ago)
it's only 88 pages, all brief diary entries, aphorisms, self-reminders, and some veiled criticism. there's a lot of fantastic advice and insights, this is the one I've found most true so far:
What no human eye is capable of catching, no pencil, brush, pen of pinning down, your camera catches without knowing what it is, and pins it down with a machine's scrupulous indifference.
― flappy bird, Wednesday, 14 November 2018 21:18 (seven years ago)
I give that book to a friend as a birthday present and then he proceeded to make a great show of adding his own marginal notes to every page and I was thinking “no, dude, don’t go there.”
― Buckaroo Can't Fail (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 14 November 2018 22:02 (seven years ago)
Laugh at a bad reputation. Fear a good one that you could not sustain.
― flappy bird, Wednesday, 14 November 2018 22:56 (seven years ago)
donkey film = perfect film
― flappy bird, Monday, 8 April 2019 16:19 (seven years ago)
just saw A Man Escaped, it was pretty great!
― Dan S, Wednesday, 9 October 2019 02:16 (six years ago)
Gonna assign Pickpocket to my students next week as an example of sound design and editing.
― TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 9 October 2019 02:20 (six years ago)
that's my next one
― Dan S, Wednesday, 9 October 2019 02:21 (six years ago)
also just noticed that Diary of a Country Priest is on the criterion channel
― Dan S, Wednesday, 9 October 2019 02:26 (six years ago)
saw it originally years ago, only remember the feelings of estrangement and loneliness
― Dan S, Wednesday, 9 October 2019 02:40 (six years ago)
remember really liking Au Hasard Balthazar, looking forward to seeing that one again
― Dan S, Wednesday, 9 October 2019 02:53 (six years ago)
loved Pickpocket as much as A Man Escaped
― Dan S, Thursday, 17 October 2019 01:38 (six years ago)
I Lancelot of the Lake a lot. It’s strange.
― circa1916, Thursday, 17 October 2019 01:59 (six years ago)
I like*
want to see Lancelot du Lac, not sure how at the moment, going to watch Diary of a Country Priest again and looking forward to Mouchette and L'Argent
― Dan S, Thursday, 17 October 2019 03:13 (six years ago)
yeah that one rules
The Devil, Probably escaped me
― flappy bird, Thursday, 17 October 2019 04:06 (six years ago)
loved man escaped, thought pickpocket was trash soz
― Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 17 October 2019 07:26 (six years ago)
I assigned Pickpocket to my students this week, and they've written well about it.
― TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 17 October 2019 10:17 (six years ago)
don't know how my post could be improved on really
though i should have mentioned that the photography is just jawdroppingly gorgeous
― Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 17 October 2019 10:40 (six years ago)
just saw Mouchette, it is also great, with perfectly economical storytelling
― Dan S, Sunday, 27 October 2019 22:01 (six years ago)
didn't know Bresson beyond Balthazar before now
― Dan S, Sunday, 27 October 2019 22:10 (six years ago)
all three of the ones I've seen - A Man Escaped, Pickpocket, Mouchette - have a ruthless, closed-off quality
― Dan S, Sunday, 27 October 2019 22:31 (six years ago)
Good description
― Ferlinghetti Hvorostovsky (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 27 October 2019 22:40 (six years ago)
L'Argent is another incredible film. I really like his style as a director
― Dan S, Friday, 8 November 2019 01:00 (six years ago)
A Man Escaped is so good. The truncated Gestapo guards in it is something that sticks in the memory, if I'm remembering it right you only see angled/restricted shots of them mostly and that adds to the feeling of de-humanised hopeless dread.
― calzino, Friday, 8 November 2019 01:15 (six years ago)
enjoyed reading Ebert's tribute article from when he died in 1999:
https://www.rogerebert.com/interviews/robert-bresson-was-master-of-understatement
― Dan S, Friday, 8 November 2019 01:32 (six years ago)
I like the quote: "If the eye is entirely won, give nothing or almost nothing to the ear. One cannot be at the same time all eye and all ear."
― Dan S, Friday, 8 November 2019 01:54 (six years ago)
I went to a screening of Pickpocket once and another random guy who was there followed me afterward trying to get me to admit it was pretentious bullshit.
― Chris L, Friday, 8 November 2019 02:10 (six years ago)
Good one
― Irae Louvin (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 9 November 2019 02:41 (six years ago)
don't think his films are pretentious but they are on the surface inscrutable
― Dan S, Saturday, 9 November 2019 02:57 (six years ago)
they seem very modest
― Dan S, Saturday, 9 November 2019 03:01 (six years ago)
My post was an xpost to Dan S, but I guess it works either way.
― Irae Louvin (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 9 November 2019 03:04 (six years ago)
I like that only the most significant moments mattered to him: “He pared down every scene and shot, every movement and utterance of his performers, to the bare essentials. Each situation, image, and sound had to have a sharpness, a freshness, a novelty. That is why Bresson’s cinema is forever modern” (Adrian Martin, Criterion)
― Dan S, Saturday, 9 November 2019 03:32 (six years ago)
― Dan S, Friday, November 8, 2019 9:57 PM
Really? His films mean what they say.
― TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 9 November 2019 03:34 (six years ago)
I think I mean that he doesn't bother to explain anything, you have to make your own interpretation
― Dan S, Saturday, 9 November 2019 03:38 (six years ago)
Martin's review of L'Argent and Bresson is good I think
https://www.criterion.com/current/posts/4719-l-argent-the-weight-of-the-world
― Dan S, Saturday, 9 November 2019 03:54 (six years ago)
Balthazar is a captivating character, but Au Hasard Balthazar as a film is hard for me to grasp
― Dan S, Saturday, 14 December 2019 00:11 (six years ago)
most of his stuff could not be called easy to grasp
― a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 14 December 2019 01:03 (six years ago)
The story focuses on the fate of Balthazar, but there is a lot of incidental nihilism in the events he witnesses
― Dan S, Saturday, 14 December 2019 01:14 (six years ago)
Mari’s “no tenderness, no heart, no feelings” masochism is really heartbreaking, in that sense the film elicits empathy, it's the component of the story that means the most to me
― Dan S, Saturday, 14 December 2019 02:09 (six years ago)
I guess there is a lot to think about with it
― Dan S, Saturday, 14 December 2019 02:19 (six years ago)
― Lidsville U.K. (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 14 December 2019 03:11 (six years ago)
lol nvm The Devil Probably is a nonpareil masterpiece
― flappy bird, Friday, 7 August 2020 07:07 (five years ago)
Why do people say L'Argent is "loosely" based on Tolstoy when virtually everything that happens in the movie is in The Forged Coupon? OK the main character in L'Argent is an amalgamation of several characters in The Forged Coupon and Bresson stops the film at the end of part one of the book (which is very violent and bleak) but he still sticks pretty closely to it.
― Webinar in Wetherspoons (Tom D.), Monday, 20 October 2025 17:55 (seven months ago)