TWO SEQUENCES FROM Gueule d'amour
Today’s “Image(s)” is from two sequences of Gueule d'amour, known in English as The Lady Killer. This story of a tragic love (a central theme for many poetic realist films of the 1930s) articulates Grémillon’s visual thinking, his style and his very peculiar way of representing the reality on screen. Two segments discussed here are from the short opening sequence, and a key sequence toward the end of the film which carry many similar spatial elements of the first.
The opening sequence: a text appears on the image and reveals the time of the story (1936) and the place (Orange). The music played on the credits, a string section flowing over a staccato-like orchestration of reeds, stops as the actual film begins. Still the duration of the shots and their juxtaposition follows the rhythmic pattern of the early score. The sense of unity within fragmented reality of the world arises from what has established during the credit and the very particular mood it has delivered.
Today’s “Image(s)” is from two sequences of Gueule d'amour, known in English as The Lady Killer. This story of a tragic love (a central theme for many poetic realist films of the 1930s) articulates Grémillon’s visual thinking, his style and his very peculiar way of representing the reality on screen. Two segments discussed here are from the short opening sequence, and a key sequence toward the end of the film which carry many similar spatial elements of the first.
The opening sequence: a text appears on the image and reveals the time of the story (1936) and the place (Orange). The music played on the credits, a string section flowing over a staccato-like orchestration of reeds, stops as the actual film begins. Still the duration of the shots and their juxtaposition follows the rhythmic pattern of the early score. The sense of unity within fragmented reality of the world arises from what has established during the credit and the very particular mood it has delivered.