Of these, only three of the shorts -- Strangulation Blues, My Last Minute and 42 One Dream Rush -- are missing from this retrospective, which includes all of his full-lengthers, in addition to Merde and the short, Sans titre. Carax (shown at left) is a filmmaker who certainly goes his own way, dividing critics and audiences in the process, although his latest work Holy Motors, which is a part of this retrospective, seems to have garnered more international praise than any of his other films and has proven quite popular, as well. (It is fun and, as is all his work, bizarre.) So maybe we're finally beginning to get used to this guy. His newest film also features an extension of that fabulously creepy character -- once again played by Carax's muse, the great Denis Lavant (below) -- from his segment film, Merde, now a doing full-length job.
If you are unfamiliar with the oeuvre of Carax, here's your chance to see it in fairly quick succession and on the big screen. If you already know some of his work, you can now catch up with most of the rest. And if, like me, you've seen it all (or almost all), there's always sloppy seconds to enjoy.
Here's the complete schedule for the series, curated by Marie Losier, which includes a personal appearance by M. Carax to introduce Holy Motors at the 7pm screening on February 26, followed by a Q&A at the end of that screening.
When Boy Meets
Girl :
The Cinema of Leos Carax
Tuesday, February
5 at 12:30, 4
& 7:30pm.
Leos Carax, 1986.
Color. 116 min.
With Michel
Piccoli, Juliette Binoche, and Denis Lavant
In French with
English Subtitles
An
intoxicating swirl of science fiction and noir that earned Carax the Prix
Louis-Delluc, Mauvais sang is set in a stark near future where those who
have loveless sex are afflicted with disease. When Alex (Lavant) is hired by two
criminals to steal the vaccine that could stop the epidemic, he finds himself
smitten with one of their mistresses.
“In his second
feature…Carax lives up to his billing as ‘the natural heir of Jean-Luc
Godard.’”—The New York
Times
Leos Carax, 1991.
Color. 125 min.
With Juliette
Binoche, Denis Lavant, and Michael Grüber
In French with
English Subtitles.
Legendarily beset by production
delays, Lovers on the Bridge was greeted with wide acclaim upon its
eventual release. Set at and around the famed Pont Neuf, the film chronicles the
love between a young addict and a painter who is losing her sight, capturing
their messy interdependency and ecstatic tenderness.
*Note:
Screening rescheduled from its original time of Tuesday, February 26
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••••••••••••••••••••
Merde
Tuesday, February 12 at 12:30, 4
& 7:30pm
Leos Carax, 2008.
Color. 35 min.
With Denis
Lavant, Jean-François Balmer, and Julie Dreyfus
In French and
Japanese with English Subtitles.
In Merde, Carax delivers an
anarchic character study of a raving, unclassifiable creature (Lavant) who
demands to be addressed as “Merde.” This darkly funny short, released as part of
Tokyo!, a trio of shorts set in the titular city featuring new
work by Michel Gondry and Bong Joon-ho in addition to Carax, serves as a
precursor for Holy Motors, where “Monsieur Merde”
reappears.
SCREENED
WITH:
Boy Meets
Girl
Tuesday, February 12 at 12:30, 4
& 7:30pm
Leos
Carax, 1984. B&W. 100 min.
With Denis Lavant
and Mireille Perrier
In French with
English Subtitles
Due for
military service and miserable from a recent break-up, Alex, a young filmmaker,
finds comfort in the company of a similarly suffering teenage girl. Prone to
documenting the tiniest details and searching for romance on a grand scale, Alex
is reminiscent of Carax himself, whose debut here is a celebration of cinema and
idiosyncrasy
"Charming first feature," -- The New York Times.
••••••••••••••••••••
"Charming first feature," -- The New York Times.
••••••••••••••••••••
Sans
titre
Tuesday, February
19 at 12:30, 4
& 7:30pm
Leos Carax, 1997.
Color. 9min.
With Guillaume
Depardieu, Yekaterina Golubeva, and Catherine Deneuve
In French with
English Subtitles.
When the Cannes Film Festival asked Carax to produce a filmic postcard that would update people on the status of his upcoming project, he responded with this abstract experimental short, a synthesis of clips from films and music (Night of the Hunter, Leonard Cohen) and footage from his then-unreleased Pola X.
SCREENED
WITH:
Pola X
Tuesday, February
19 at 12:30, 4
& 7:30pm
Leos Carax, 1999.
Color. 134min.
With Guillaume
Depardieu, Yekaterina Golubeva, and Catherine Deneuve
In French with
English Subtitles. Screening at Florence Gould Hall.
Living in
a countryside castle with his mother, a bourgeois writer enjoys a carefree life
until he is confronted by a woman claiming to be his sister. With life thrown
into disarray, the man plunges into a relationship with her, turning his back on
both his mother and his fiancée. Shocking, explicit, yet still steeped in the
romance of Carax’s other work.
"Pola X has enough fireworks to keep you in your seat. When it's over, you'll know you've had an experience." -- Stephen Holden, The New York Times.
•••••••••••••••••••
"Pola X has enough fireworks to keep you in your seat. When it's over, you'll know you've had an experience." -- Stephen Holden, The New York Times.
•••••••••••••••••••
Tuesday, February
26 at 12 &
4:30pm
Leos Carax, 2012.
Color. 115 min.
With Denis
Lavant, Édith Scob, Eva Mendes and Kylie Minogue
In French and
English with English Subtitles
Carax’s
first feature in more than a decade confirms the originality of his vision as
well as the talents of longtime collaborator Denis Lavant. In the nocturnal
hours, Monsieur Oscar appears to live many lives—exacting murderer, doting
father, ogre-like savage—but it’s unclear which is exactly real. And if he is
merely acting, then whom is he acting for? Hallucinatory, vital
filmmaking.
The New York
Times Critics’
Pick
“A gripping surrealist odyssey that makes most other films look very buttoned-up.“—The Guardian (UK)
MEET THE DIRECTOR!
acclaimed director Leos Carax presents Holy Motors and participates in a Q&A following the screening. Moderated by Richard Brody, The New Yorker film critic.
Holy
Motors
Tuesday, February
26 at
7pm
*Note:
Screening rescheduled from Friday, February 8.
•••••••••••••••••••••
About
FIAF
FIAF's mission is to create and
offer New Yorkers innovative and unique programs in education and the arts that
explore the evolving diversity and richness of French cultures. FIAF seeks to
generate new ideas and promote cross cultural dialogue through partnerships and
new platforms of expression. www.fiaf.org
Merci!
Special
thanks to Leos Carax, Joan Dupont, Oleg and Dima Dubson, Marison Martinez,
Amaury Augé, and Unifrance.
Cinema
programs are made possible by Institut français, Unifrance, the Cultural
Services of the French Embassy, the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the New
York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the
New York State Legislature.
CinémaTuesdays is
sponsored by
American Airlines, The Official Airline of FIAF; Lancôme, Nespresso,
and TV5MONDE.
FIAF
would like to thank the following winter season sponsors:
American
Airlines, the official airline of FIAF; OpenSkies, the Cultural Services of the
French Embassy; Florence Gould Foundation; Institut français; New York State
Council on the Arts; New York City Department of Cultural Affairs; The Peter Jay
Sharp Foundation, and Robert de Rothschild.
•••••••••••••••••••••
QUICK CHECKLIST OF WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
What: When Boy Meets Girl: The Cinema of Leos Carax
When: CinemaTuesdays, February 5th through 26
Where: FIAF -- Florence Gould Hall an Tinker Auditorium
55 E. 59th St. (between Park and Madison Aves.)
Admission: $10; $7 students; free for FIAF members ($2 in advance)
Tickets: www.fiaf.org or 800-982-2787
Information: www. fiaf.org or 212-355-6160
Transportation: Subway -- 4, 5, 6, N, R & Q to 59th St. & Lexington Ave.
Buses: M1, M2, Mc, M4, Q31 to 59th St., M5 to 58th St.,
and from Queens: Q32 to 60th & Madison.
What: When Boy Meets Girl: The Cinema of Leos Carax
When: CinemaTuesdays, February 5th through 26
Where: FIAF -- Florence Gould Hall an Tinker Auditorium
55 E. 59th St. (between Park and Madison Aves.)
Admission: $10; $7 students; free for FIAF members ($2 in advance)
Tickets: www.fiaf.org or 800-982-2787
Information: www. fiaf.org or 212-355-6160
Transportation: Subway -- 4, 5, 6, N, R & Q to 59th St. & Lexington Ave.
Buses: M1, M2, Mc, M4, Q31 to 59th St., M5 to 58th St.,
and from Queens: Q32 to 60th & Madison.
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