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Writings

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Writings
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Jean-Marie Straub
By (author) Daniele Huillet
Edited by Sally Shafto
Foreword by Miguel Abreu
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:624
Dimensions(mm): Height 210,Width 146
Category/GenreFilm theory and criticism
ISBN/Barcode 9780983216995
Audience
General
Illustrations 123 color illus., 34 b&w illus.; 157 Illustrations, unspecified

Publishing Details

Publisher Sequence Press
Imprint Sequence Press
Publication Date 23 October 2018
Publication Country United States

Description

The writings of Straub and Huillet, presented for the first time in a critical, English-language edition, shed light on the filmmaking couple's essential contributions and their unique place in film history. A text is spoken; it merges the sphere of ideas, from which it comes, with an immediate and sensible sphere of bodies that give life to them, with a nature that sustains these bodies, and that they in turn nourish by naming it. The body, in which language resonates, becomes the body of the text itself and protracts its speaking. Here trees are trees and become trees. We learn by taking pleasure in the sublime essence of colors (leaf-green, earth-brown, sky-blue, bronzed-skin...), of timbres (voices, birds, steps...), of textures (flesh, fabric, earth...), the irreversibility of gestures. These shots are rich in their concerted poverty: here's how. -Anne Benhaiem, from introduction to "Conception of a Film" Sequence Press is pleased to announce the publication of the writings of the filmmaking couple Jean-Marie Straub and Daniele Huillet, presented for the first time in a critical, English-language edition. Two of the most exacting directors of the past fifty years, Straub and Huillet are renowned for their meticulous adaptations of works by giants of Western art and literature: Sophocles, Corneille, Bach, Hoelderlin, Cezanne, Brecht, Schoenberg, Kafka, Pavese, et al. The publication coincides with the first complete U.S. retrospective of their films at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, and the concurrent exhibition, Films and Their Sites, at Miguel Abreu Gallery. Jean-Marie Straub came of age as a slightly younger contemporary of the French New Wave. Like those directors, he began his career writing film criticism. "Writing about films," Jean-Luc Godard later said, "was already a way of making films." This volume thus begins with Straub's early film criticism from the 1950s and traces the evolution of over five decades of writing activity, from manifestoes and trenchant declaratory texts, to detailed descriptions of working methods, letters, questionnaires, and select interviews and oral interventions. Writings opens with an introduction by Sally Shafto that provides an in-depth look at Straub and Huillet's beginnings, within the context of the emergent filmmaking forces of the time. The book highlights their rigorous methodologies as translators of key texts, and the precision work required to adapt those translations for the screen. As Straub himself said, "We are the only European filmmakers, filmmakers of European nations. We make films in Italian as well as in French and in German. Who else can say that?" The book brings us behind the scenes and reveals how their publication practices mirrored those of their film production and distribution, as they often made distinct versions of the same film using alternative takes and different languages. In addition to the published texts, the book comprises a richly illustrated Atelier section featuring three full length annotated film scripts, along with other pieces of writing, such as letters to their collaborators, shooting diagrams and schedules, lab notes, and press kits, all of which bring the reader into the heart of Huillet and Straub's creative process. The volume closes with a Portfolio of intimate photographs of the filmmakers at work, with onsite observations by their long-time director of photography and collaborator, Renato Berta, and a detailed filmography. Jean-Marie Straub and Daniele Huillet resolutely eschewed a Hollywood style of spectacle filmmaking to create some of the most raw and beautiful, as well as innovative and profoundly moving films of our times. Their writings open up a further understanding of their essential contributions, and their unique place in film history.

Author Biography

Jean-Marie Straub (b. 1933) and Daniele Huillet (1936-2006) together formed a collaboration that produced some of the most innovative, rigorous, and profoundly moving films in the history of cinema. They are renowned for their meticulous adaptations of works by giants of Western art and literature: Sophocles, Corneille, Bach, Hoelderlin, Cezanne, Brecht, Schoenberg, Kafka, Pavese, et al. Straub continues to renew his commitment to subverting cinematic conventions, and maintains the spirit of his exacting partnership with Huillet, broadening a body of work that now includes over fifty films with his most recent, Gens du Lac, released in 2018. Jean-Marie Straub (b. 1933) and Daniele Huillet (1936-2006) together formed a collaboration that produced some of the most innovative, rigorous, and profoundly moving films in the history of cinema. They are renowned for their meticulous adaptations of works by giants of Western art and literature: Sophocles, Corneille, Bach, Hoelderlin, Cezanne, Brecht, Schoenberg, Kafka, Pavese, et al. Straub continues to renew his commitment to subverting cinematic conventions, and maintains the spirit of his exacting partnership with Huillet, broadening a body of work that now includes over fifty films with his most recent, Gens du Lac, released in 2018.

Reviews

Editor and translator Sally Shafto has selected texts and images with shrewdness and insight, and designer Scott Ponik has assembled them into a book that is not merely easy to read, but is a pleasure to hold. People who've never heard of Straub-Huillet will want to be seen with it ... Indeed, this one book informs not only the films Straub-Huillet derived from it, but all of their work. Conflict and struggle are inevitable, resolution is perpetually deferred, but nature, poetry, and music refresh and inspire. -Kevin McMahon, Los Angeles Review of Books