Berghahn Books
Je T’Aime... Moi Non Plus
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About this book
A series of limiting definitions have tended to delineate the Franco-British cinematic relationship. As this collection of essays reveals, there is much more to it than simple oppositions between British critical esteem for the films of France and French dismissal of ‘le cinéma British’, or the success of Ken Loach et al. at the French box office and the relative dearth of French movies on British screens. In fact, there has long been a rich and productive dialogue between these two cultures in which both their clear differences and their shared concerns have played a vital role. This book provides an overview of the history of these relations from the early days of sound cinema to the present day. The chapters, written by leading experts in the history of French, British and European cinema, provide insights into relations between French and British cinematic cultures at the level of production, exhibition and distribution, reception, representation and personnel. The book features a diverse range of studies, including: the exhibition of French cinema in Britain in the 1930s, contemporary ‘extreme’ French cinema, stars such as Annabella, David Niven and Jane Birkin and the French Resistance on British screens.
Author / Editor information
Lucy Mazdon is a Reader in Film Studies at the University of Southampton. She has written widely on French cinema and television and her publications include Encore Hollywood: Remaking French Cinema (BFI, 2000), France on Film: Reflections on Popular French Cinema (Wallflower, 2001) and The Contemporary Television Series (EUP, 2005).
--- Contributor: Catherine WheatleyCatherine Wheatley is a Research Assistant at the University of Southampton where she is working on Lucy Mazdon’s AHRC funded project on French cinema in Britain. She is the author of Michael Haneke’s Cinema: The Ethic of the Image (Berghahn Books, 2009) and is a regular contributor to Sight and Sound.
Reviews
“These diverse, thoughtfully arranged essays show how geographical proximity and overlapping histories have shaped the two countries’ film cultures by opening up new layers of meaning. This collection makes a vital contribution to the film literature of both countries by demonstrating how fruitful relational studies of cinema can be. Si, je t’aime.” · Journal of British Cinema and Television
“This is a rich and academically relevant collection … that offers an engagement with a full spectrum of disciplinary interests … The running filmography that is established across the volume will be a great resource to film scholars and students, and the range of methodological approaches deployed is genuinely inspiring in terms of its diversity, application and results.” · Sue Harris, Queen Mary University of London
“[T]here is much here to inform the specialist and please the aficionado. This is a welcome addition to the fields of reception studies, French and British film history and culture, and transnational film studies.” · Professor Elizabeth Ezra, University of Stirling
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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List of Illustrations
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List of Tables
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Acknowledgements
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Introduction. Franco-British Cinematic Relations: An Overview
1 - Part I: Industry and Institutions
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1 The Exhibition, Distribution and Reception of French Films in Great Britain during the 1930s
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2 The ‘Cinematization’ of Sound Cinema in Britain and the Dubbing into French of Hitchcock’sWaltzes from Vienna (1934)
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3 Une Entente Cordiale? – A Brief History of the Anglo-French Film Coproduction Agreement, 1965–1979
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4 Channel-crossing Festivals: The Cases of the French Film Festival U.K. and Dinard’s Festival du Film Britannique
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5 The Language of Love? How the French Sold Lady Chatterley’s Lover (Back) to British Audiences
81 - Part II: Reception and Perceptions
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6 Disciplining the Nouvelle Vague: Censoring A Bout de Souffle and Other Early French New Wave Films (1956–1962)
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7 The Reception of the Nouvelle Vague in Britain
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8 ‘New Waves, New Publics?’: The Nouvelle Vague, French Stars and British Cinema
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9 Mirror Image: French Reflections of British Cinema
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10 ‘Incredibly French’?: Nation as an Interpretative Context for Extreme Cinema
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11 British Audiences and 1990s French New Realism: La Vie Rêvée des Anges as Cinematic Slum Tourism
169 - Part III: Personnel and Performance
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12 ‘The Meaning of That French Word Chic’: Annabella’s Franco-British Stardom
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13 ‘Those Frenchies Seek Him Everywhere’: David Niven in Franco-British Cinematic Relations
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14 Truffaut in London
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15 Jane Birkin: From English Rose to French Icon
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16 The French Resistance Through British Eyes: From ’Allo ’Allo! to Charlotte Gray
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17 ‘In the Ghetto’: Space, Race and Marginalization in French and British ‘Urban’ Films La Haine and Bullet Boy
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Notes on Contributors
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Index
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