Seven Scenes For Black And White Cinema

by Otar Iosseliani

(Fiction, France, 1982, 25’, BW, Fr ST)

with Philippe Cousin, Otar Iosseliani, Antonine Catzéflis

Seven Scenes For Black And White Cinema

A cinematic tribute to the city of Paris, made up of small sketches interspersed with frames shot in the streets of Paris. An affectionate portrait of the capital and its inhabitants, as seen by a filmmaker.


“I am a Georgian director. In Georgia, we are gay, nonchalant. As everywhere, we work, suffer, have fun before dying. You can always count on your friends, you try to teach children that you can’t be happy because of the misery of others. Before coming to France, I was told that the French were very closed-minded, mean-spirited. I don’t think so. I am surrounded by generous people whom your country has given me as friends and family. This little movie you’re about to see is inspired by my love for them.” Otar Iosseliani www.festival-entrevues.com

Otar Iosseliani
Otar Iosseliani

Born in 1934 in Tbilisi, Georgia, Otar Iosseliani studied music brilliantly before starting scientific studies in Moscow, which he abandoned to join the National Institute of Cinematography in Moscow. His first short films Aquarelle (1958) and April (1961) were blacklisted in the USSR. His first feature-length film, Falling Leaves (1966), traces the daily life of a peasant community in a very impressionist style. His art of contemplative distance, similar to Jacques Tati’s, his acknowledged master, asserted itself with Once Upon A Time There Was A Singing Blackbird (1971) and Pastorale (1976). His work totters between fiction and documentary. His attraction to purely visual language brought him closer to the authors of the Nouvelle Vague Française: François Truffaut, Claude Chabrol, Jean-Luc Godard. Despite their creator’s international reputation, these films were banned from export for many years. Based in France since 1982, Iosseliani directed his first French film Favorites of the Moon in 1984, which won the Special Jury Prize at the Venice Mostra. He then shot And Then There Was Light (1989), Chasing Butterflies (1991), Brigands, Chapter VII (1995), Monday Morning (2001) – Silver Bear for Best Director at the Berlin International Film Festival, Gardens in Autumn (2005). Outside his country, Otar Iosseliani manages to keep the humanist vision nuanced with humor and irony that made the success of his Georgian films. His latest film Chantrapas (2009) is an ode to freedom. It follows the story of a young director (alter ego of the author) who makes no compromise with censorship, whether ideological or economic, in the name of freedom of creative thought. He has also directed several documentaries for television: Euskadi (1982), A Little Monastery in Tuscany (1988) and Georgia, Alone, a documentary triptych of more than four hours about his country of origin. www.cineressources.net

Other movies: Tributes

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