The eccentric Mr. Hulot’s ill-fated attempt to bring his ultra-modern camper to an Amsterdam auto show results in comic disaster.Read More »
Jacques Tati
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Jacques Tati – Traffic (1971) (HD)
1971-1980ArthouseComedyFranceJacques Tati -
Jacques Tati – Les vacances de Monsieur Hulot AKA Monsieur Hulot’s Holiday (1953) (HD)
1951-1960ComedyFranceJacques TatiMonsieur Hulot, Jacques Tati’s endearing clown, takes a holiday at a seaside resort, where his presence provokes one catastrophe after another. Tati’s masterpiece of gentle slapstick is a series of effortlessly well-choreographed sight gags involving dogs, boats, and firecrackers; it was the first entry in the Hulot series and the film that launched its maker to international stardom.Read More »
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René Clément – Soigne ton gauche AKA Watch Your Left (1936)
1931-1940ComedyFranceRené ClémentShort FilmA boxer is out in the country with his entourage, training for his next fight. Meanwhile, on the farm nearby, Roger is neglecting his chores. As he watches the boxer and his sparring partners at work, Roger starts to fantasize about being a boxer himself. Then, when none of the boxer’s sparring partners can continue, he is asked to fill in, although he doesn’t know anything about how to box.Read More »
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Jacques Tati – L’école des facteurs AKA The School for Postmen (1947)
1941-1950ComedyFranceJacques TatiShort FilmSynopsis:
School for Postmen (French: L’École des facteurs) is a short film directed by Jacques Tati in 1947. Tati plays a French postman adamant to prove he can be just as fast as American postmen at delivering mail. The film includes several sight gags that involve his bicycle. He replicated most of the action here in his first major feature film, Jour de fête, released two years later.Read More » -
Jacques Berr – Gai dimanche! AKA Fun Sunday! (1935)
1931-1940ComedyFranceJacques BerrShort FilmGai Dimanche is a 1935 three reel film written by and starring Jacques Tati and his friend Rhum. The pair star as down-and-outs (very much their situation in reality at the time) who try to generate funds by providing an impromptu leisure tour in a rickety bus they wangle use of for free. Released in 1935 and rarely seen today, the film offers brief glimpses and hints towards methods Tati would begin to perfect on the big screen a decade later.Read More »
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Jacques Tati & Sophie Tatischeff – Forza Bastia (2002)
2001-2010DocumentaryFranceJacques TatiShort FilmSophie TatischeffQuote:
“Forza Bastia” is a 26-minute film documenting a UEFA Cup match between PSV Eindhoven and French club SC Bastia at the Furiani Stadium in 1978. Jacques Tati directed the piece at the request of friend Gilberto Trigano – the President of the Bastia club at that time. It was subsequently shelved and kept in storage until Tati’s daughter Sophie Tatischeff eventually assembled the footage for release in 2002.Read More » -
Jacques Tati – Parade (1974)
1971-1980ComedyFranceJacques TatiTVQuote:
A distillation not of Jacques Tati per se, but of communal spectacle and creation — cinema. The circus is the setting, abstracted into blank spotlights but with the audience always present, always as much a part of the show as the jugglers, acrobats, contortionists, drummers, and assorted pratfall artisans. At the center is Tati, silver-haired in a turtleneck, miming taking punches in the ring, riding a horse, directing traffic, swinging a tennis racket in slow-mo. Playtime and Traffic exhausted the French producers, so the auteur staged his swansong as a Swedish TV-special, a casual affair, a slender recording of dance-hall whimsy and a profound summarization of a man’s life and art.Read More »
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Jacques Tati – Jour de fête AKA The Village Fair [1964 re-edited version] (1949)
France1941-1950ClassicsComedyJacques TatiSynopsis
Jacques Tati’s award-winning feature début – a dazzling blend of satire and slapstick is early evidence of his unique talent. Acclaimed by international critics as an innovative comic masterpiece, Jour de fête is an hilarious exposé of the modern obsession with speed and efficiency, set amidst the rural surroundings of a tiny French village. Tati plays an appealingly self-deluded buffoon a postman who, impressed by the bristling efficiency of the American postal system, makes a wholly misguided attempt to introduce modern methods in the depths of rural France.Read More »