the art house darling of french cinema mr. keith trice (luc)
TRANSCRIPT
the art house darling of French cinema
Mr. Keith Trice (Luc)
Jeunet was born on September, 3rd 1953 in Roanne, France
Not much at all is known about Jeunet’s personal life; he is very private
Worked for a telephone company like his father
Bought a Super 8 camera at the age of 17 to experiment with
Jeunet realized this camera was all he needed to make movies
“When I was a kid, I used to escape from my family with my imagination, and I kept this spirit into my adult life”
Imagination inspired his dark, light-hearted, and romantic visions
In the early 20th century, 8mm film was the solution to cutting both size and cost of equipment
George Eastman Kodak company introduced this new film in 1932
25” spool of 16mm with two sides; after each side of 8mm film was exposed, the two films were split and spliced together at the ends
This made it cheaper to experiment with filmIn the 1960’s, Super 8mm film was introduced:
bigger surface area to record more
Super 8
In his early 20’s, Jeunet moved to Paris as a handyman for a phone company
Attended university at Cinèmation StudiosBegan making short films with Marc CaroThe two make several war-torn dystopian
shorts– “The Bunker of the Last Shot” (1981) establishing their names in the film industry
Jeunet is known for his directing and casting; Marc Caro is known for his artistic direction– eventually they separated
The Bunker of the Last Gunshot (1981)
Jeunet and Caro worked separately for ten years before their next collaboration
They made music videos and commercials in the meantime to finance their next film
Jeunet realizes later in his career that all you need in France is one major success to live off of in cinema
A major debut from Jeunet and Caro, Delicatessen is a hybrid mix of romance, comedy, and horror set in a post-apocalyptic surrealist city. TRAILER
Awards
Delicatessen awarded Jeunet and Caro with four cesars
Cesars included best new director(s) They later went on to direct City of Lost
Children in 1995In both films, Jeunet and Caro split
responsibilities: Jeunet handled the directorship, storyboard, and actors, while Caro worked on the artistic direction
After City of Lost Children, Jeunet and Caro pursue other endeavors
Jeunet is called to Hollywood to direct Alien: Resurrection in 1997
The fourth installment in the Alien series is a flop because of poor writing (from Joss Whedon) and a mediocre cast
Jeunet returns to France keeping his thoughts on a special project, and the hopes that it will be his one success
Amélie was written as a very special project for Jean-Pierre
The film is released to critical success in 2001In interviews, he points out that the main
character, Amélie, is a representation of his childhood self
Set in Montmarte, Jeunetcreates a beautiful vision of the city of Paris
Amélie is Jeunet’s great success, setting him up for life
The streets of Montmartre are colored in a beautiful, sepia-style warm filter (vivid reds and green, non-existent blue colors)
Graffiti on the streets were removed in post to make it as visually clean as possible
Shot in very wide angles (14, 18, 21, 25, & 27mm lenses) to capture as many details as possible; also to correct his actor’s facial features
Jeunet’s focus is to show you his interpretation of reality– one filled with warmth and imagination
Colors are edited in post (this is called color-grading)A technicolor filter was added to make red and green
tones prominent, while de-saturating all blue tonesA warm filter was applied to mask the film in an orange
tintThe combined results are a very warm image (possibly
between 6500-7000 degrees in kelvin)This same color-grading process may have been used
in Jeunet’s earlier film, Delicatessen as it is also a very warm-looking film
Color-grade Comparison
Original Trailer in French
Amélie is a story about a young woman with a fantastical imagination, who because of a sheltered childhood, seeks to find the objects of other people’s pasts to re-acquaint them with their child-like sense of joy and wonder in the world.
Awards
Amélie was a film in which Jeunet had set the bar in France; consequently, he would be critiqued heavily for not keeping to his standards– especially after the release to Americans
Jeunet went on to direct “A Very Long Engagement” starring Audrey Tautou and Dominique Pinon
It received positive reviews, but it fell short of American movie-goer’s expectations
Jeunet had the “complete freedom” to work as he wanted on his French productions
In Hollywood, with “Alien: Resurrection”, he felt as if that freedom was stolen from him
American film is set around pre-establishment
French cinèma is based on the momentArtistic direction in French cinéma is much
more lax in this regard
A life in pictures is an interview filmed in 2010 in which Jeunet explains his collaboration with Caro, his feelings on American cinéma and Hollywood, and his successes with Amélie
A Life in PicturesJeunet is working on an American film “The
Young and Prodigious Spivet” which will feature an American cast including Helena Bonham Carter set to release in late 2013
Link, Adrianna. "The Summer of Super 8: A Look at the Film's Technological Origins." Web log post. The Atlantic. Smithsonian, 16 June 2011. Web. 20 Apr. 2013.
Aftab, Kaleem. "Magic Moments: Jean-Pierre Jeunet." Web log post. The National. N.p., 15 July 2010. Web. 20 Apr. 2013. <http://www.thenational.ae/arts-culture/film/magic-moments-jean-pierre-jeunet>.
"Jean Pierre Jeunet - Biography." IMDb - Jean Pierre Jeunet. IMDb.com, n.d. Web. 20 Apr. 2013. <http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000466/bio>.
Richards, Evan E. "Deconstructing Amélie." Rev. of Amélie. Web log post. @ Evan E. Richards. N.p., 30 June 2011. Web. 20 Apr. 2013. <http://evanerichards.com/2011/2120>.