Film at Lincoln Center | Jacques Rozier: Chronicler of Summer | Trailer | August 16-22 @filmlinc | Uploaded August 2024 | Updated October 2024, 3 days ago.
Jacques Rozier: Chronicler of Summer takes place August 16-22 at Film at Lincoln Center. Get tickets: filmlinc.org/series/rozier/#films
Film at Lincoln Center and Janus Films present “Jacques Rozier: Chronicler of Summer,” a retrospective of the French New Wave filmmaker’s influential career, featuring all five of his features and a selection of short films. The series will be presented at FLC from August 16 through August 22 and will premiere several new restorations of Rozier’s signature works, including 4K restorations of Near Orouët (1971) and Maine-Océan Express (1986).
Across five idiosyncratic, episodic features, and an assortment of fiction and documentary short films, Rozier distinguished himself from his peers through his fixation on the idea of vacations as theatrical staging grounds upon which his magnetic actors could play and simply be, making him something like a more lighthearted (though no less complex) counterpart to his fellow New Waver, Jacques Rivette. It is remarkable that Rozier’s influence has been so profoundly felt considering how rarely his singular films have screened outside of France.
More info: filmlinc.org
Subscribe: youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=filmlincdotcom
Like on Facebook: facebook.com/filmlinc
Follow on X: twitter.com/filmlinc
Follow on Instagram: instagram.com/filmlinc
Jacques Rozier: Chronicler of Summer takes place August 16-22 at Film at Lincoln Center. Get tickets: filmlinc.org/series/rozier/#films
Film at Lincoln Center and Janus Films present “Jacques Rozier: Chronicler of Summer,” a retrospective of the French New Wave filmmaker’s influential career, featuring all five of his features and a selection of short films. The series will be presented at FLC from August 16 through August 22 and will premiere several new restorations of Rozier’s signature works, including 4K restorations of Near Orouët (1971) and Maine-Océan Express (1986).
Across five idiosyncratic, episodic features, and an assortment of fiction and documentary short films, Rozier distinguished himself from his peers through his fixation on the idea of vacations as theatrical staging grounds upon which his magnetic actors could play and simply be, making him something like a more lighthearted (though no less complex) counterpart to his fellow New Waver, Jacques Rivette. It is remarkable that Rozier’s influence has been so profoundly felt considering how rarely his singular films have screened outside of France.
More info: filmlinc.org
Subscribe: youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=filmlincdotcom
Like on Facebook: facebook.com/filmlinc
Follow on X: twitter.com/filmlinc
Follow on Instagram: instagram.com/filmlinc