The scenes in the hotel where the poet (the half clad Enrique Rivero) moves from door to door is really trippy, as are the 'flying lessons' he observes in one though the keyhole.
With a typically quirky score by Georges Auric and shot by Georges Périnal.
Is it surrealist? Not according to Cocteau. "In the film, I sleep on my feet. It is the story of a sleep-walker, but not of a dreamer. In that state of dozing in front of a fire, when the mind wanders, I express myself through signs. To describe it as a 'surrealist film' is laughable, and only proves the ignorance of historians of the mind." So there.
This, Un Chien Andalou and L'Age d'Or were all made possible through the 'aristocratic whim' of the patron Vicomte Charles A. de Noaille. Cocteau had never stepped foot in a film studio before and had no experience whatsoever, which gave him the freedom to do 'whatever he liked'. He argues this is the way new film makers should begin. I think that's a very valid approach.
".....or how I was caught in a trap by my own film." |
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