Screen/Society--French Film Festival--"Francofonia" [DCP Screening]

Tuesday, February 14, 2017 - 2:00pm to 3:45pm
Screen/Society--French Film Festival--"Francofonia" [DCP Screening]

Film Screening:

Francofonia 

(Aleksandr Sokurov, 2015, 87 min, France/Germany/Netherlands, in Russian/French/German/English w/ English Subtitles, Color, DCP) 

-- Introduced by Prof. Martha van der Drift (Romance Studies); Q&A to follow! 

Set against the backdrop of the Louvre Museum's history and artworks, master director Alexander Sokurov (Russian Ark) applies his uniquely personal vision onto staged re-enactments and archives for this fascinating portrait of real-life characters Jacques Jaujard and Count Franziskus Wolff-Metternich and their compulsory collaboration at the Louvre Museum under the Nazi Occupation. These two remarkable men - enemies then collaborators - share an alliance which would become the driving force behind the preservation of museum treasures. In its exploration of the Louvre Museum as a living example of civilization, Francofonia is a stunning and urgently relevant meditation on the essential relationship between art, culture, and history.

About the filmmaker:

 

 

Throughout his vast filmography – documentary, fiction, and others somewhere in between – Alexander Sokurov has demonstrated that a museum is much more than a place to preserve art. Museums are the veritable DNA of a civilization, the living organ of the city where the heart of a nation beats. With Francofonia, he explores a historical chapter that we might know, but whose description does not take into account all the lines that run through it. Sokurov’s body of work includes his “Men of Power” tetralogy (Faust, The Sun [Emperor Hirohito], Taurus [Vladimir Lenin] and Moloch [Adolph Hitler]), Russian Ark (set entirely in St Petersburg’s Hermitage Museum), Mother and Son and Father and Son.

 

 

 

-- Winner of Fedeora Award at Venice Film Festival (2015)!

"Whimsically intelligent...gently reminds the viewer why all this is terribly relevant today." - Deborah Young, The Hollywood Reporter

"Francofonia is a brilliant meditation on art, on war - and what happens to art when nations go to war." - Stephen Rea, Philadelphia Inquirer 

Cost: Free and open to the public.

Sponsors: The Center for French and Francophone Studies (CFFS), the Program in Arts of the Moving Image (AMI), the Department of Art, Art History & Visual Studies (AAHVS), the Department of Slavic and Eurasian Studies, and the Department of Romance Studies.

Bryan Center Griffith Film Theater