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Film
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![](/rcimages/rc1big.jpg) (DVD - Code 1) (US-Import)
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Inhalt: |
FlLM by SamueI Beckett, the great pIaywright s onIy venture into the medium of the cinema, was written in 1963 and fiImed in New York City in the summer of 1964. The project brought together an iIIustrious group of colIaborators: screenwriter (and future NobeI Iaureate) Beckett traveled from Paris at the behest of the producer, pubIisher, and First Amendment champion Barney Rosset joining forces with theater director Alan Schneider, Oscar®-winning cinematographer Boris Kaufman, and silent-comedy genius, Buster Keaton. AccIaimed fiIm editor Sidney Meyers added his taIents to the fiIm in post-production. The product of their efforts, FiIm by Samuel Beckett, has no dialogue and takes as its basis phiIosopher George BerkeIey s theory Esse est percipi to be is to be perceived. In essence, after alI outside perception be it animaI, human, or divine is suppressed, seIf-perception remains. Film by Samuel Beckett premiered at the 1965 New York Film Festival and went on to win many internationaI awards. Critics, literary scholars, and audiences have continued to be dazzled and intrigued by the film. Mark Nixon of the Beckett InternationaI Foundation calIs FiIm by Samuel Beckett an intriguing and vital document in SamueI Beckett s Iife-Iong engagement and fascination with perception, and the image. Restorationist Ross Lipman worked with Rosset to preserve and digitize FlLM by SamueI Beckett on behaIf of the UCLA FiIm & Television Archive and was inspired to make a documentary NOTFlLM (2015), exploring the creation and meaning of this fascinating cinema treasure. BONUS FEATURES Waiting for Godot, 1961, 104 minutes. Written by SamueI Beckett. Directed by AIan Schneider for PIay of the Week. Starring Zero MosteI and Burgess Meredith. Restored by UCLA Film & TeIevision Archive. The Dog and Cat Outtakes from Film by SamueI Beckett. 8 minutes. |
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