Anbieter: Le Livre à Venir, Chantelle, Frankreich
Troyes: Centre Culturel Thibaud de Champagne. Directeur: Dominique Daguet. Un volume broché (21x29,4 cm), 122 pages. Bon état. Notamment avec des fac-similés de lettres d?Henry Miller et André Breton au peintre Grégoire Michonze. Créés en 1975 à Troyes par Dominique Daguet (1938-2021), poète et ancien secrétaire de Jean Paulhan, Cahiers bleus compteront 70 numéros jusqu?en 2007. Revue de poésie et de littérature qui propose des numéros thématiques et des monographies d?auteurs. Livres.
Verlag: Agnes Delahaie Productions, N.p., 1962
Anbieter: Royal Books, Inc., ABAA, Baltimore, MD, USA
Fotografie
Vintage borderless photograph of Florence Delay (as Joan, being led to trial), from the set of the 1962 film. Seen is the back of Robert Bresson's head, wearing his signature straw hat behind the camera. French studio stamp reading, "Le Proces de Jeanne d'Arc" on the verso. Linda Rasmussen at AllMovie notes: "Characteristically breaking with tradition, director Robert Bresson presents a realistic, unique view of the life and death of Joan of Arc. Using a script based on the actual transcript notes taken during her trial, Bresson focuses on the psychological and physical torture that Joan had to endure, showing how these techniques were used to break her resolve and cause her to eventually recant her faith. "With impeccable historical accuracy Bresson re-creates the story of the peasant girl who, after leading an unsuccessful revolt against the government, was brought to trial, convicted of heresy, and burned as a witch. However, Bresson shows Joan (Florence Carrez) as a woman more sophisticated and calculating and less naive than she has normally been represented. His Joan, while more real, is no less heroic than the traditional Joan." 7 x 9.5 inches. Near Fine.
Verlag: The Malpaso Company, Burbank, CA, 1971
Anbieter: Royal Books, Inc., ABAA, Baltimore, MD, USA
Fotografie
Vintage borderless photograph of Clint Eastwood and Don Siegel on set from the 1971 film. With a rubber stamp crediting photographer Andre Marinie on the verso. Based on Thomas Cullinan's 1966 novel, set during the American Civil War, about an injured Yankee soldier (Eastwood), who is rescued by a teenage girl from a Southern boarding school. At the school, the students and staff are at first shy to the soldier, but as he recovers his charms win them over. As he "seduces" nearly every student and staff member, jealousy among them arises, creating a steamy and sadistic theme (including some scenes of sexual tension that "beguiled" censors and audiences of the 1970s). Don Siegel would direct Eastwood the same year in "Dirty Harry," a far throw from the dramatic, repressed feel of this film. Set in Louisiana, shot on location in Louisiana and California. 9.5 x 7.25 inches. Near Fine, light creasing and light edgewear.
Verlag: Argos Films, Neuilly-sur-Seine, France, 1973
Anbieter: Royal Books, Inc., ABAA, Baltimore, MD, USA
Fotografie
Three vintage borderless reference photographs from the 1973 French erotic film. Two with stamp snipes on the verso, one with a printed mimeo snipe to the verso, and all three with the stamp of still photographer Andre Marinie. Director Walerian Borowczyk's fourth feature length film, a sexually explicit time-traveling romp ranging from the bloodthirsty exploits of Elizabeth Bathory to a nineteenth-century country girl masturbating to thoughts of Jesus Christ. Two photographs 7 x 4.75 inches, one photograph 7 x 5 inches. Near Fine. Bier 354.
Verlag: N.p., N.p., 1970
Anbieter: Royal Books, Inc., ABAA, Baltimore, MD, USA
Fotografie
Collection of nine vintage reference photographs from the 1970 film, including eight borderless and one with narrow margins and wide bottom margin. Two bear provenance stamps on the verso, and one bears the stamp of photographer Andre Marinie. Three in the collection are on the set photographs featuring director Jacques Demy. Based on the 1695 French fairytale in verse by Charles Perrault, and loosely based on Jean Cocteau's 1946 "Beauty and the Beast." Shot on location in Chambord, Ecuille, Gmabais, Manche, and Oise, France. Photographs range in size from 7 x 5 inches to 10.5 x 7 inches. Generally about Near Fine. Criterion Collection 718.
Verlag: N.p., N.p., 1960
Anbieter: Royal Books, Inc., ABAA, Baltimore, MD, USA
Fotografie
Vintage borderless photograph from the 1962 film by photographer Andre Marinie. A candid, on-the-set photograph of the film's reclusive director, Robert Bresson, behind the camera, typically pensive and with cigarette in hand. Marinie's stamp and stamp from the film's production companies, Agnes Delahaie Productions and Consortium Pathe on the verso. Linda Rasmussen at AllMovie notes: "Characteristically breaking with tradition, director Robert Bresson presents a realistic, unique view of the life and death of Joan of Arc. Using a script based on the actual transcript notes taken during her trial, Bresson focuses on the psychological and physical torture that Joan had to endure, showing how these techniques were used to break her resolve and cause her to eventually recant her faith. "With impeccable historical accuracy Bresson re-creates the story of the peasant girl who, after leading an unsuccessful revolt against the government, was brought to trial, convicted of heresy, and burned as a witch. However, Bresson shows Joan (Florence Carrez) as a woman more sophisticated and calculating and less naive than she has normally been represented. His Joan, while more real, is no less heroic than the traditional Joan." In a custom museum-quality frame, archivally mounted, with UV glass. 9.5 x 7.25 inches. Near Fine.