The Jean Vigo Collection (2 disc Collector's Edition) [DVD]
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #7075 in DVD
- Released on: 2004-10-25
- Rating: Parental Guidance
- Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
- Formats: Black & White, PAL
- Original language: French
- Subtitled in: English
- Number of discs: 2
- Running time: 160 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Special Features
Region 0
Synopsis
Jean Vigo is considered one of the great masters of French cinema, despite having died at the age of 29 and only making four films. This 2 disc set presents restored versions of his films, including his two great masterpieces - L'Atalante and Zero de Conduite, also included are a range of special features guaranteed to please.
Customer Reviews
Stellar Collection
The French director Jean Vigo died tragically before his 30th birthday, but by then he had already directed two masterpieces in "Zero de Conduite" (a tale of schoolboy rebellion based partly on his own experiences, and very much an inspiration for Lindsay Anderson's "if..." made over 30 years later) and "L'Atalante".
The latter film in particular is still astonishing and captivating 70 years on from its first release. Vigo takes a rather trite boy-meets-girl story and, through imaginative direction and a refusal to indulge in sentimentality, renders it into something timeless. The film met with a distinctly cool reception when first shown, and it's easy to see now with the benefit of hindsight that it was far ahead of it's time.
If this collection contained just those two films it would be reason enough to make this one of the most compelling DVD releases of 2004, but the icing on the cake is the inclusion of Jean Vigo's two other films. The first is "A Propos de Nice", an excellent cinematic essay on the French seaside resort. The second is the rarely-seen "Taris", a short and playful look at a famous swimmer of the period.
In addition to the 4 films, the second disc contains a wealth of interesting bonus features, including a fascinating full-length French TV documentary that includes interviews with several of Vigo's surviving collaborators. All 4 films naturally show their age a little in terms of wear and tear, but have been superbly restored.
Plaudits (yet again) to Artificial Eye for an excellent release, well nigh essential for anyone with an interest in French cinema.
An excellent companion to this collection is the BFI book (part of their film classics series) on L'Atalante, by Marina Warner.
The Complete Jean Vigo
This excellent collection of Jean Vigo's films demonstrate his exraordinary talent as a film maker. Innovative, spectacular, fascinating, humorous, angry - seemingly showing a delight in capturing the many varied and colourful aspects of humanity, whilst also containing elements of subversion and anarchy. Despite all this, Vigo is acutely aware of the possibilities of film as an art form. The short films are brilliant and have proved to be influential, however, for me, the outstanding work from this collection is his feature-length masterpiece, L'Atalante.
L'Atalante is a hauntingly beautiful film. It is exquisitely directed, with stunning photography and wonderful acting. The setting on a working barge provides a picturesque and demanding environment for this story of two romantically innocent newlyweds enjoying their love for each other and trying to adapt their relationship to the difficult confines of a barge, accompanied by two disparate characters as crew. Michel Simon as the Mate, Pere Jules, is superb. The film is full of tenderness, humour, and human warmth although the characters are so real their interaction can also be disturbing, prosaic, intriguing, petty - sometimes almost all at the same time. This is an unforgettable film, and anybody at all interested in cinema should see it.
Sheer beauty from start to finish.
Some reputations in cinema are over-flated. So what of Jean Vigo, whose career output consisted of three shorts and one feature?
Widely considered one of the all time great film directors, is his legend really deserved on the strength of one full length film?
Oh yes and then some! His short montages 'A Propos de Nice', and 'Taris', a beautiful portrait of champion swimmer, Jean Taris, show a delightful touch and grace of a film-maker still developing his craft.
But it was his anarchic boarding school short 'Zero de Conduit', that truly showed the world that he was a major talent to watch. Unbelievably fearless for its day (full frontal nudity and swearing), this took the youth versus authority storyline to spectacular new heights and spawned a major (and inferior) remake with Lindsay Anderson's 'If'.
However, it was 'L'Atalante' that sealed Vigo's reputation forever. It was hard to believe that Vigo was only 27 when he made it. The greatest ode to heterosexual love that cinema has ever seen (sorry Dr Zhivago), this is a work of delightful playfulness and subtle erotism. A young couple aboard a floating barge find their honeymoon besieged by fighting and fluffy cats (don't ask). The purity of Vigo's film-making is breath-taking in its purity. If you love cinema in any way, shape or form, you simply have to own this.
Not only that, but the second disc is bursting with goodies. A massive documentary on Vigo covers his life, times and films, a look at the various versions of L'Atalante, interviews with key-players, a biography, posters and more! I just hope one day all DVD's are like this.

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