Archive for the ‘La Bete Humaine - Criterion Collection’ Category

WordPress database error: [Table 'wp_usermeta' is marked as crashed and should be repaired]
SELECT meta_key, meta_value FROM wp_usermeta WHERE user_id = '14702' /* pluggable get_userdata */

La Bete Humaine - Criterion Collection Movie Streaming

Dimanche, août 1st, 2010
La Bete Humaine - Criterion Collection Movie Streaming. La Bete Humaine - Criterion Collection Movie Streaming.

Movie Title: La Bete Humaine - Criterion Collection
Average customer review:

La Bete Humaine - Criterion Collection is available for streaming or downloading.

Click Here to Stream or Download La Bete Humaine - Criterion Collection

Although the identifying phrase “Film Noir” was yet to be used for another few decades, Jean Renoir’s “La Bete Humaine” could arguably be considered one of the genre’s blueprints. In fact, aside from the over-melodramatic music score, this naturalistic 1938 thriller looks and feels very contemporary. Jean Gabin is quite effective as the brooding train engineer plagued by “blackouts” in which he commits acts of uncontrollable violence, usually precipitated by moments of passion (Freudians will have a field day with all the point-of-view camerawork showing Gabin chugging his big, powerful locomotive through long dark tunnels). The beautiful Simone Simon sets the mold for all future Femme Fatales with an earthy, Sophia Loren-type sexuality not usually found in movies from the 1930’s. In fact, it would be another 30 years or so before American crime films like “In Cold Blood” and “Bonnie And Clyde” would adapt a similar blend of adult language, sexuality and unflinching violence (in 1938, Hollywood was too busy pumping out Shirley Temple movies). Moody cinematography and a general existential malaise certainly doesn’t make this a “feel good” popcorn movie, but fans of classic Noir will be fascinated. (Note: this film was remade in 1954 as “Human Desire”).

For the first seven minutes of La Bete Humaine we’re in the open cab of a huge steam engine barreling down the tracks at 60 miles an hour from Le Havre to Paris. The only sounds are the roar of the wind and the wheels on the rails. One crew member is hurling shovels-full of coal into the fire box. The other is checking the gauges, pulling a lever, sticking his head out the side to look ahead. The engineer is dressed in dirty coveralls, a greasy cloth cap on his head, protective goggles pushed up on his forehead. The wind rushes over him. We can’t hear a thing because of the noise. Sometimes we catch a glimpse of him framed for a moment against the sky. The engineer is Jacques Lantier (Jean Gabin). Controlling that huge engine and driving it at speed is what has given his life any meaning. Some film critics say this was one of the movies the early noir directors in the Forties must have seen. Perhaps, but this film transcends the genre.

Buy,Download, Or Stream La Bete Humaine - Criterion Collection! Click Here

Lantier is a taciturn working man, not disliked but lonely. He suffers spells of headaches, fever, of “waves of grief,” of violent seizures he blames on the alcoholism of his parents. He wears the sadness of life like a cloak on his shoulders. One night, as a passenger on the train returning to Le Havre, he sees the Le Havre station master, Roubard (Fernand Ledoux), and his wife, Severine (Simone Simon), on board. Roubard, jealous of his younger wife, has just killed a man in the man’s train compartment. Lantier, looking at Severine, provides a statement that avoids implicating either her or her husband, but then fatefully finds himself falling in love with her. And Severine? “I am incapable of loving anyone,” she tells Lantier. But Lantier moves into a passionate affair with her, a relationship which Lantier needs and which Severine uses. Severine realizes how Lantier might be used to solve the problem of her husband’s existence. From there, the movie moves ahead with all the power of Lantier’s steam engine and with all the inevitability of death. There is no redemption, no absolution for anyone. And at the end, what is Lantier’s epitaph? Just “Poor guy.”

La Bete Humaine is a great example of Jean Renoir’s ability to tell a story which focuses on the humanity of the characters while not flinching from their circumstances or the results of their actions. The style of the movie is integral to its effect. The railway scenes all were shot on location. The grime of the workingmen’s lives is everywhere. For all the scenes of the train on the move, only one brief back-screen projection shot was used, at the end of the movie for obvious reasons. Renoir and his cameraman, his nephew Claude Renoir, set cameras on the train focused on the engine cab, or attached to the side of the engine. The train powers its way over the tracks, through tunnels and across bridges. The sound track was recorded right there. Renoir also used great imagery. That shot of Gabin with the goggles on his forehead framed against the sky is almost iconic. A stabbing which takes several minutes is inter-cut with scenes of a dance for the trainmen and a man on stage singing a popular music hall song. The first consummation of the relationship between Lantier and Severine takes place in a hard rainstorm, and the camera cuts away to a downspout gushing water into a barrel, fading out and back to the water slowly stopping in the morning, then moving to a doorway to show two pairs of feet in shoes step away from the small shack. I have to think that Hitchcock would have envied that scene, although Renoir plays it matter-of-factly, without the hint of a smirk.

Buy,Download, Or Stream La Bete Humaine - Criterion Collection! Click Here

Gabin, for me, is probably the best film actor. He doesn’t show a lot of emotion; his face can sometimes barely move. He’s not a particularly handsome man. Even so, he can move from sad longing to fearful emotional distress in seconds. He doesn’t seem to look much different when Lantier is happy, looking forward to meeting Severine, to when he looks distressed but determined, when he intends to do what Severine wants him to do. But there is no doubt what Lantier is feeling.

This is a terrific, tough, sad film well worth owning. The Criterion DVD looks excellent. The extras include an introduction by Renoir, a useful interview with Peter Bogdanovitch and a fascinating short film made in 1957 showing Renoir directing Simone Simon in a scene from La Bete Humaine. Included in the case is a substantial booklet which includes three articles about Renoir and this movie.
Watch NBA Basketball Games Online | Watch NBA Playoffs Online Live
Watch NBA Basketball Games Online | Watch NBA Playoffs Online Live
Watch NBA Basketball Games Online | Watch NBA Playoffs Online Live
Watch NBA Basketball Games Online | Watch NBA Playoffs Online Live
Watch NBA Basketball Games Online | Watch NBA Playoffs Online Live

Streaming La Bete Humaine - Criterion Collection Online

Vendredi, avril 30th, 2010
Streaming La Bete Humaine - Criterion Collection Online. Streaming La Bete Humaine - Criterion Collection Online.

Movie Title: La Bete Humaine - Criterion Collection
Average customer review:

La Bete Humaine - Criterion Collection is available for streaming or downloading.

Click Here to Stream or Download La Bete Humaine - Criterion Collection

Although the identifying phrase “Film Noir” was yet to be used for another few decades, Jean Renoir’s “La Bete Humaine” could arguably be considered one of the genre’s blueprints. In fact, aside from the over-melodramatic music score, this naturalistic 1938 thriller looks and feels very contemporary. Jean Gabin is quite effective as the brooding train engineer plagued by “blackouts” in which he commits acts of uncontrollable violence, usually precipitated by moments of passion (Freudians will have a field day with all the point-of-view camerawork showing Gabin chugging his big, powerful locomotive through long dark tunnels). The beautiful Simone Simon sets the mold for all future Femme Fatales with an earthy, Sophia Loren-type sexuality not usually found in movies from the 1930’s. In fact, it would be another 30 years or so before American crime films like “In Cold Blood” and “Bonnie And Clyde” would adapt a similar blend of adult language, sexuality and unflinching violence (in 1938, Hollywood was too busy pumping out Shirley Temple movies). Moody cinematography and a general existential malaise certainly doesn’t make this a “feel good” popcorn movie, but fans of classic Noir will be fascinated. (Note: this film was remade in 1954 as “Human Desire”).

For the first seven minutes of La Bete Humaine we’re in the open cab of a huge steam engine barreling down the tracks at 60 miles an hour from Le Havre to Paris. The only sounds are the roar of the wind and the wheels on the rails. One crew member is hurling shovels-full of coal into the fire box. The other is checking the gauges, pulling a lever, sticking his head out the side to look ahead. The engineer is dressed in dirty coveralls, a greasy cloth cap on his head, protective goggles pushed up on his forehead. The wind rushes over him. We can’t hear a thing because of the noise. Sometimes we catch a glimpse of him framed for a moment against the sky. The engineer is Jacques Lantier (Jean Gabin). Controlling that huge engine and driving it at speed is what has given his life any meaning. Some film critics say this was one of the movies the early noir directors in the Forties must have seen. Perhaps, but this film transcends the genre.

Buy,Download, Or Stream La Bete Humaine - Criterion Collection! Click Here

Lantier is a taciturn working man, not disliked but lonely. He suffers spells of headaches, fever, of “waves of grief,” of violent seizures he blames on the alcoholism of his parents. He wears the sadness of life like a cloak on his shoulders. One night, as a passenger on the train returning to Le Havre, he sees the Le Havre station master, Roubard (Fernand Ledoux), and his wife, Severine (Simone Simon), on board. Roubard, jealous of his younger wife, has just killed a man in the man’s train compartment. Lantier, looking at Severine, provides a statement that avoids implicating either her or her husband, but then fatefully finds himself falling in love with her. And Severine? “I am incapable of loving anyone,” she tells Lantier. But Lantier moves into a passionate affair with her, a relationship which Lantier needs and which Severine uses. Severine realizes how Lantier might be used to solve the problem of her husband’s existence. From there, the movie moves ahead with all the power of Lantier’s steam engine and with all the inevitability of death. There is no redemption, no absolution for anyone. And at the end, what is Lantier’s epitaph? Just “Poor guy.”

La Bete Humaine is a great example of Jean Renoir’s ability to tell a story which focuses on the humanity of the characters while not flinching from their circumstances or the results of their actions. The style of the movie is integral to its effect. The railway scenes all were shot on location. The grime of the workingmen’s lives is everywhere. For all the scenes of the train on the move, only one brief back-screen projection shot was used, at the end of the movie for obvious reasons. Renoir and his cameraman, his nephew Claude Renoir, set cameras on the train focused on the engine cab, or attached to the side of the engine. The train powers its way over the tracks, through tunnels and across bridges. The sound track was recorded right there. Renoir also used great imagery. That shot of Gabin with the goggles on his forehead framed against the sky is almost iconic. A stabbing which takes several minutes is inter-cut with scenes of a dance for the trainmen and a man on stage singing a popular music hall song. The first consummation of the relationship between Lantier and Severine takes place in a hard rainstorm, and the camera cuts away to a downspout gushing water into a barrel, fading out and back to the water slowly stopping in the morning, then moving to a doorway to show two pairs of feet in shoes step away from the small shack. I have to think that Hitchcock would have envied that scene, although Renoir plays it matter-of-factly, without the hint of a smirk.

Buy,Download, Or Stream La Bete Humaine - Criterion Collection! Click Here

Gabin, for me, is probably the best film actor. He doesn’t show a lot of emotion; his face can sometimes barely move. He’s not a particularly handsome man. Even so, he can move from sad longing to fearful emotional distress in seconds. He doesn’t seem to look much different when Lantier is happy, looking forward to meeting Severine, to when he looks distressed but determined, when he intends to do what Severine wants him to do. But there is no doubt what Lantier is feeling.

This is a terrific, tough, sad film well worth owning. The Criterion DVD looks excellent. The extras include an introduction by Renoir, a useful interview with Peter Bogdanovitch and a fascinating short film made in 1957 showing Renoir directing Simone Simon in a scene from La Bete Humaine. Included in the case is a substantial booklet which includes three articles about Renoir and this movie.
convert dvd to avi
Watch NBA Basketball Games Online | Watch NBA Playoffs Online Live
Eliminate Credit Card Debts | Get Rid of Credit Card Debt Now | Credit Card Debt Consolidation
homes for sale nc | nc real estate | durham 27703 nc homes for sale
Watch NBA Basketball Games Online | Watch NBA Playoffs Online Live