Description
Robert Bresson is a French filmmaker who is known for his meticulous refinement of the form's grammatical and expressive possibilities. He has made thirteen feature films over a forty-year career, all of which are characterized by a uncompromising moral vision and aesthetic rigor. This study provides a detailed analysis of each of Bresson's films, including nearly 100 illustrations. It elucidates Bresson's unique style as it evolved from the impassioned Les Anges du pche to such disconsolate meditations on the world as The Devil Probably and L'Argent.
Perhaps the most highly regarded French filmmaker after Jean Renoir, Robert Bresson created a new kind of cinema through meticulous refinement of the form's grammatical and expressive possibilities. In thirteen features over a forty-year career, he held to an uncompromising moral vision and aesthetic rigor that remain unmatched. Robert Bresson: A Passion for Film is the first comprehensive study to give equal attention to the films, their literary sources, and psycho-biographical aspects of the work. Concentrating on the films' cinematographic, imagistic, narrative, and thematic structures, Pipolo provides a nuanced analysis of each film-including nearly 100 illustrations-elucidating Bresson's unique style as it evolved from the impassioned Les Anges du pche to such disconsolate meditations on the world as The Devil Probably and L'Argent. Special attention is also given to psychosexual aspects of the films that are usually neglected. Bresson has long needed a thoroughgoing treatment by a critic worthy to the task: he gets it here. From it emerges a provocative portrait of an extraordinary artist whose moral engagement and devotion to the craft of filmmaking are without equal.