DREAMING REVOLT: Jean Rollin, the French Fantastique, and Beyond
2013-04-15 - 2013-04-29
DREAMING REVOLT: Jean Rollin, the
French Fantastique, and Beyond
Mondays, April 15-29, 7-10pm
Friperie Potetr
$21
Instructor: Mario DeGiglio-Bellemare
A filmmaker ridiculed by film critics and genre fans alike, Jean Rollin
(1938-2010) has only recently begun to find acceptance in his native France.
Rollin was first discussed in a positive light in the Anglo-Saxon world by
British author David Pirie, who championed him as a pioneer of the sex-vampire
movie in his book The Vampire Cinema (1977). However, genre fans in North
America only began to see Rollin’s films in earnest when a mail-order company
called Video Search of Miami released “special edition” VHS tapes of his films in 1995.
Rollin’s films have been described in often paradoxical ways, from poetic and
literary, to absurdist and oneiric, to technically inept and narratively
impenetrable. Hence, Rollin films occupy a liminal space in film history -
where art-house horror mixes with sexual taboo, where the fantastique tradition
mixes with the “serial film,” and where lyricism mixes with the macabre -
resulting in a disarmingly unique and personal cinematic vision. This
three-week course will examine the career of Jean Rollin (aka Michel Gentil)
within the specific trajectories that inform his oeuvres as a French genre filmmaker:
the history of the French fantastique, the impact of the surrealist movement,
the historical (and political) context of sexploitation and pornography in the
1970s and 1980s, and finally, an aspect rarely discussed about his work, the
influence of the Parisian Grand-Guignol theatre (1897-1962).
Note: Some of the reading material for
this course will be in French.
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Instructor: Mario DeGiglio-Bellemare
Mario is a native Montrealer and “monster kid”
who teaches courses on genre cinema and monsters in the Humanities
department of John Abbott College. He began to watch monster movies at the age
of 9, staying up to watch Hammer films on late-night television. He has been an independent filmmaker with the Volatile Works
collective for several years, working primarily in super-8 and 16mm. His films
combine a love of silent cinema, “exploitation films,” the horror genre, and
agit-prop sensibilities. He completed his PhD at the University of
Toronto, and he also writes in the area of film and
religion. He is presently undertaking research on the history of the Parisian
Grand-Guignol theatre and its impact on cinematic horror, especially the French
"fantastique." He has published articles for Golem: The Journal of Religion
and Monsters, as well as for theJournal of
Religion and Film and for the Journal of Religion and Popular Culture.
He is also an occasional writer for the Canadian horror genre
magazine Rue-Morgue.