1 00:00:00,680 --> 00:00:04,389 Change nothing so that everything is different. 2 00:00:24,560 --> 00:00:27,120 Don't show every side of things. 3 00:00:27,680 --> 00:00:30,672 Allow yourself a margin of indefiniteness. 4 00:05:11,960 --> 00:05:16,272 Histories of cinema, in the plural. 5 00:05:27,000 --> 00:05:29,719 All the stories 6 00:05:30,680 --> 00:05:33,240 that will be 7 00:05:34,560 --> 00:05:36,118 that have been. 8 00:09:06,760 --> 00:09:10,878 To tell the story of the last tycoon 9 00:09:12,480 --> 00:09:13,754 Irving Thalberg. 10 00:09:17,000 --> 00:09:21,835 A TV executive has, at most, 200 films a year in his head. 11 00:09:23,160 --> 00:09:25,799 Thalberg was the only person who, 12 00:09:26,000 --> 00:09:28,958 every day, had 52 films in his head. 13 00:10:50,440 --> 00:10:51,839 The foundation. 14 00:10:52,880 --> 00:10:54,598 The founding father. 15 00:11:02,720 --> 00:11:04,119 The only son. 16 00:11:10,200 --> 00:11:12,839 This story had to pass by this: 17 00:11:14,960 --> 00:11:17,872 A young body, fragile and beautiful, 18 00:11:29,160 --> 00:11:31,674 as described F. Scott Fitzgerald - 19 00:11:32,000 --> 00:11:35,072 so that this could exist: 20 00:11:38,160 --> 00:11:39,752 The power of Hollywood. 21 00:13:22,800 --> 00:13:25,075 The power of Babylon. 22 00:13:38,480 --> 00:13:39,879 A dream factory. 23 00:13:43,320 --> 00:13:45,231 History of cinema. 24 00:13:48,080 --> 00:13:51,470 Newness of history. History of news. 25 00:15:59,920 --> 00:16:03,799 What has gone through cinema and is still marked by it 26 00:16:04,000 --> 00:16:06,150 can no longer enter anywhere else. 27 00:16:10,240 --> 00:16:12,196 A dream factory. 28 00:16:22,800 --> 00:16:27,112 Communism wore itself out trying to dream up such factories. 29 00:17:46,520 --> 00:17:50,638 Married to one of the prettiest women alive. 30 00:18:07,440 --> 00:18:10,034 Or to tell the story of Howard Hughes. 31 00:18:35,720 --> 00:18:37,517 Braver than Mermoz, 32 00:18:38,200 --> 00:18:39,792 richer than Rockefeller. 33 00:19:13,400 --> 00:19:16,790 Producer of Citizen Kane, president of TWA. 34 00:19:17,800 --> 00:19:21,270 As if Meliès ran Gallimard and the SNCF. 35 00:19:55,680 --> 00:19:57,398 And before Hughes Aircraft 36 00:19:57,600 --> 00:20:02,116 began fishing up CIA submarines from the bottom of the Pacific, 37 00:20:07,800 --> 00:20:11,793 he forced RKO starlets to go on weekly limousine rides 38 00:20:16,560 --> 00:20:18,039 at one mile an hour 39 00:20:22,640 --> 00:20:26,110 so their breasts wouldn't bounce up and down. 40 00:20:35,640 --> 00:20:38,598 His death, worse than anything 41 00:20:38,800 --> 00:20:41,519 Defoe had imagined for Robinson. 42 00:23:06,840 --> 00:23:11,277 To tell the stories of all the films never made... 43 00:24:08,240 --> 00:24:12,791 To tell the stories of all the films never made... 44 00:25:52,200 --> 00:25:55,875 To tell the stories of all the films never made, 45 00:26:02,360 --> 00:26:04,271 rather than those that were. 46 00:26:11,800 --> 00:26:14,268 Those that were can be seen on TV. 47 00:26:14,480 --> 00:26:16,675 Let's not exaggerate: 48 00:26:16,880 --> 00:26:19,997 They're not even copies of reproductions. 49 00:27:19,800 --> 00:27:23,679 1940. Geneva. L'Ecole des femmes. Max Ophuls. 50 00:27:55,080 --> 00:27:57,719 He fell on Madeleine Ozeray's ass, 51 00:27:57,920 --> 00:28:01,799 while the Germans were taking the French from behind 52 00:28:04,920 --> 00:28:07,718 and while Louis Jouvet was giving up. 53 00:29:28,280 --> 00:29:31,078 Theater is something too much known. 54 00:29:32,200 --> 00:29:34,839 The cinématographe, too unknown... 55 00:29:35,720 --> 00:29:36,675 up to now. 56 00:31:29,680 --> 00:31:33,514 History of cinema newness of history. 57 00:31:33,720 --> 00:31:35,438 History of news. 58 00:31:37,160 --> 00:31:40,914 Histories of cinema, with "s". 59 00:31:41,520 --> 00:31:43,033 With SS. 60 00:32:21,160 --> 00:32:23,310 1939, 1940, 1941... 61 00:32:23,720 --> 00:32:25,472 Betrayal by radio, 62 00:32:26,200 --> 00:32:27,872 but cinema keeps its word. 63 00:32:37,160 --> 00:32:41,358 Because from Siegfried and M to the dictator and Lubitsch, 64 00:32:42,520 --> 00:32:43,873 films were made. 65 00:32:48,960 --> 00:32:50,393 1940, 1941. 66 00:32:51,240 --> 00:32:55,552 Even scratched to death, a simple 35-millimeter rectangle 67 00:32:56,080 --> 00:32:58,640 saves the honor of reality. 68 00:33:00,160 --> 00:33:01,991 1941, 1942. 69 00:33:02,480 --> 00:33:05,517 If poor images still strike 70 00:33:05,920 --> 00:33:09,276 without anger or hatred, like a butcher, 71 00:33:10,280 --> 00:33:12,874 it is because cinema is there: Silent film, 72 00:33:13,080 --> 00:33:16,959 with its humble and formidable power of transfiguration. 73 00:33:19,080 --> 00:33:21,674 1942, 1943, 1944. 74 00:33:23,040 --> 00:33:24,758 That which plunges into the night 75 00:33:24,960 --> 00:33:27,793 is the echo of what silence submerges. 76 00:33:29,960 --> 00:33:31,871 What silence submerges 77 00:33:35,240 --> 00:33:38,915 sustains in light that which plunges into the night. 78 00:35:43,160 --> 00:35:44,991 Images and sounds, 79 00:35:54,320 --> 00:35:56,993 like travelers whose paths cross 80 00:35:57,200 --> 00:35:59,156 and who can no longer part ways. 81 00:36:35,240 --> 00:36:37,993 To prove it, the masses like myths. 82 00:36:38,200 --> 00:36:40,236 Cinema speaks to the masses. 83 00:36:41,400 --> 00:36:43,709 But if the myth begins with Fantomas, 84 00:36:43,920 --> 00:36:45,512 it ends with Christ. 85 00:36:46,520 --> 00:36:49,751 What did those who listened to St. Bernard hear? 86 00:36:49,960 --> 00:36:51,996 Not what he was saying? 87 00:36:52,200 --> 00:36:54,270 Maybe. Probably. 88 00:36:55,920 --> 00:36:58,559 How can we neglect what we learn 89 00:36:58,760 --> 00:37:02,548 when that unknown voice plunges deep into our hearts? 90 00:37:35,480 --> 00:37:37,914 What the news can teach us: 91 00:37:38,840 --> 00:37:41,673 The birth of a nation, of hope, 92 00:37:48,760 --> 00:37:50,352 of Rome, Open City. 93 00:37:50,560 --> 00:37:53,870 The cinématographe never meant to create an event, 94 00:37:54,080 --> 00:37:55,274 but a vision. 95 00:38:10,680 --> 00:38:12,272 Because the screen 96 00:38:12,480 --> 00:38:13,959 is the same white canvas 97 00:38:14,160 --> 00:38:16,151 as the Samaritan's shirt. 98 00:38:24,440 --> 00:38:28,149 What Arnold and Richter's cameras preserve, 99 00:38:28,840 --> 00:38:32,515 so as not to be outdone by nightmares and dreams, 100 00:38:33,080 --> 00:38:37,392 will not be shown on a screen, but on a shroud. 101 00:38:44,800 --> 00:38:47,109 If the deaths of Puig and the Négus, 102 00:38:47,320 --> 00:38:49,311 of Captain Boïeldieu, 103 00:38:49,760 --> 00:38:52,479 and of the little bunny were inaudible, 104 00:38:53,280 --> 00:38:56,955 it is because life never rendered what it stole from film. 105 00:38:58,360 --> 00:39:02,069 Forgetting extermination is part of extermination. 106 00:39:35,400 --> 00:39:36,879 Histories of cinema, 107 00:39:37,680 --> 00:39:39,910 stories without speech, 108 00:39:40,560 --> 00:39:42,710 stories of the night. 109 00:40:12,040 --> 00:40:14,474 For nearly 50 years, in the dark, 110 00:40:14,680 --> 00:40:19,151 moviegoers burn imagination to heat up reality. 111 00:40:19,760 --> 00:40:21,830 Now reality is seeking revenge. 112 00:40:22,040 --> 00:40:24,873 It wants real tears, real blood. 113 00:40:32,480 --> 00:40:33,674 From Vienna to Madrid, 114 00:40:33,880 --> 00:40:35,108 from Siodmak to Capra, 115 00:40:35,320 --> 00:40:37,675 from Paris to Los Angeles and Moscow, 116 00:40:37,880 --> 00:40:40,189 from Renoir to Malraux and Dovjenko - 117 00:40:40,400 --> 00:40:44,757 great fiction directors couldn't control the vengeance 118 00:40:45,520 --> 00:40:48,159 which they had directed over and over. 119 00:42:05,120 --> 00:42:07,076 The poor cinema of news 120 00:42:07,280 --> 00:42:10,431 must clear the blood and tears of all suspicion 121 00:42:10,640 --> 00:42:13,359 as streets are cleaned too late, 122 00:42:13,880 --> 00:42:16,519 after the army has fired at the masses. 123 00:42:34,320 --> 00:42:35,673 What there is of cinema 124 00:42:35,880 --> 00:42:38,678 in wartime newsreels says nothing. 125 00:42:38,880 --> 00:42:40,393 It does not judge. 126 00:42:53,520 --> 00:42:55,351 No close-ups. 127 00:42:55,560 --> 00:42:57,437 Suffering is not a star. 128 00:43:02,080 --> 00:43:06,392 Nor is the burned-down church or the bombed-out countryside. 129 00:44:02,600 --> 00:44:06,388 The spirits of Flaherty and Epstein took over. 130 00:44:06,600 --> 00:44:10,878 Daumier and Rembrandt, with his terrifying black and white. 131 00:44:52,600 --> 00:44:54,033 A few pans, 132 00:44:54,240 --> 00:44:59,075 an occasional high angle, for a mother mourning her murdered child. 133 00:45:45,400 --> 00:45:48,153 It is because this time alone 134 00:45:48,840 --> 00:45:53,197 the only veritable popular art form rejoins painting, 135 00:45:53,400 --> 00:45:55,118 that is: Art. 136 00:45:55,320 --> 00:45:58,392 That is: What is reborn from what was burned. 137 00:46:26,640 --> 00:46:30,474 We've forgotten that village, its white walls and olive trees, 138 00:46:30,680 --> 00:46:32,432 but we remember Picasso, 139 00:46:32,920 --> 00:46:34,558 that is: Guernica. 140 00:46:44,120 --> 00:46:48,511 We've forgotten Valentin Feldman, killed in '43, 141 00:46:49,320 --> 00:46:52,437 but we remember at least one other prisoner, 142 00:46:52,640 --> 00:46:54,119 that is: Goya. 143 00:46:55,160 --> 00:46:59,915 And if George Stevens hadn't used the first 16-mm color film 144 00:47:00,280 --> 00:47:02,396 in Auschwitz and Ravensbruck, 145 00:47:04,040 --> 00:47:08,192 Elizabeth Taylor would never have found a place in the sun. 146 00:47:18,920 --> 00:47:20,638 1939, 1944. 147 00:47:21,760 --> 00:47:24,832 Martyrdom and resurrection of the documentary. 148 00:47:28,600 --> 00:47:32,673 How marvelous to be able to look at what we cannot see. 149 00:47:33,040 --> 00:47:35,918 What a miracle for our blind eyes. 150 00:47:41,600 --> 00:47:42,749 Besides that, 151 00:47:42,960 --> 00:47:44,552 cinema is an industry. 152 00:47:45,000 --> 00:47:47,560 And if World War I allowed 153 00:47:47,760 --> 00:47:50,228 American cinema to ruin French cinema, 154 00:47:50,680 --> 00:47:52,352 with the advent of television, 155 00:47:52,560 --> 00:47:54,437 World War II allowed it to finance, 156 00:47:55,120 --> 00:47:57,395 that is, to ruin, European cinema. 157 00:48:15,200 --> 00:48:17,634 "Do you have two hands?" Asks the blind man. 158 00:48:28,320 --> 00:48:31,232 But looking won't reassure me. 159 00:48:31,960 --> 00:48:35,430 Why trust my eyes, if I have doubts? 160 00:48:36,120 --> 00:48:38,793 Why check my eyes 161 00:48:39,000 --> 00:48:41,355 to see whether I see my hands? 162 00:49:56,880 --> 00:49:58,518 Help!