Pascal Aubier

  • Pascal Aubier – Le Fils de Gascogne AKA The Son of Gascogne (1995)

    Pascal Aubier1991-2000ArthouseComedyFrance
    Le Fils de Gascogne (1995)
    Le Fils de Gascogne (1995)

    The Son of Gascogne (1995)
    October 9, 1995
    FILM FESTIVAL REVIEW;Maybe He’s The Son Of a Film Legend
    By STEPHEN HOLDEN
    Published: October 9, 1995

    There really isn’t much difference between a favorite screen image and a personal memory of youthful passion, except that one exists on film and the other only in our private mental movies. That insight lies at the heart of Pascal Aubier’s delicious comic bouillabaisse of a film, “The Son of Gascogne.” The film, which the New York Film Festival is showing tonight at 9 and tomorrow night at 6 at Alice Tully Hall, is a fable about an innocent young man who inherits a mystique that has everything to do with old movies and old loves and our eagerness to confuse the two.Read More »

  • Serge Bard – Fun and Games for Everyone (1968)

    1961-1970ExperimentalFranceSerge BardThe Films of May '68

    Quote:
    “Fun and Games (for Everyone): a pitch black and milky white film shot during one of Olivier Mosset’s exhibition openings. A psychedelic game of improvisation joins the Zanzibar group with Salvador Dalí, Barbet Schroeder and Jean Mascolo… the solarized image reminiscent of thick strokes of a paintbrush.” – PHILIPPE AZOURYRead More »

  • Pascal Aubier – La mort du rat AKA Death of the Rat (1973)

    Pascal Aubier1971-1980ComedyFranceShort Film

    Introduction
    A factory siren sounds, workers punch in, the machinery starts. A worker opens small bags under a spout that spews beans into the bag. The worker must open a new bag quickly before the spout…Read More »

  • Pascal Aubier – Valparaiso, Valparaiso (1971)

    1971-1980Amos Vogel: Film as a Subversive ArtComedyFrancePascal AubierPolitics

    Review by Jonathan Rosenbaum:
    It’s been a full quarter of a century, but I still harbor fond memories of a low-budget French comedy called Valparaiso Valparaiso, a first feature starring Alain Cuny and Bernadette Lafont that I saw at Cannes in 1973. A lighthearted satire about the myopia of romantic French revolutionaries, it details an elaborate hoax perpetrated on a befuddled leftist–a character so absorbed in the glory of departing for Chile to fight the good fight as a special agent that he doesn’t even notice the political struggle going on around him on the French docks when he leaves. Read More »

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