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  1. But at the end of the day they are sociopathic killers - something most of the world knows nothing about. Great scenes for Patsy in that episode. Because ironically the ending to that episode was cinematic.

  2. Jul 28, 2024 · Sentenced to obscurity after its original 35mm materials were lost to a fire in 1973, L’amour fou will screen in its digitally-resurrected glory at the Cinémathèque this Wednesday, July 31.

  3. Jul 14, 2020 · A borrowing from French, the phrase amour fou, literally mad love, denotes uncontrollable or obsessive passion or infatuation. It was introduced into English as a theme of drama, prose narrative and cinema. In French, the phrase occurs, for example, in Les Amours d’un interne (Paris: E. Dentu, 1881), by the French author Jules Claretie (1840 ...

  4. Dec 19, 2011 · The four-hour experimental L’amour fou (the title pays tribute to André Breton’s 1937 surrealist text) initiates Rivette’s exploration of temporal duration.

  5. static1.squarespace.com › staticL’Amour Fou

    When I learned the term “L’Amour Fou” in a Surrealism art history class, I immediately felt as though a well of emotions and experiences had been bound into one term. The following moments were a visceral sensation of a visual story unwinding; I was nowhere near a filmmaker at that time, but knew that this was a film that needed to be ...

  6. Apr 18, 2017 · This article explores the practice and theory of two aspects of film form in the work of Jacques Rivette in the late 1960s and early 1970s: montage and filmic space.

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  8. Amour Fou. The French have a term for it, for the impossible, absolute, self-punishing and strange love that ignites and, like a nitrate print in flames, cannot be extinguished. Amour fou has been a perennial subject of French cinema and especially those filmmakers closely aligned with the Surrealists who found in rapturous mad love a sublime ...

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