Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/08/24
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 12:29 PM 24/08/97 -0600, you wrote: >Gerard, that sounds like a wonderful film. I would love to see it. Should it >pop up in anyone's TV Guide here in the US, please record it, or post when >and where it is showing. There are several you may be interested in. They are rarely aired on TV now. One, La Vie est a Nous (Life is Ours), is a French Communist propaganda documentary, while the other, Victoire de la Vie (Return to Life), is propaganda designed to raise money for the Republicans prior to the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War. HCB also served as an assistant director and played a priest in Une Partie de Campagne (A Day in the Country), and had another spot appearance in the film, Regle du Jue (Rules of the Game). All of this took place while HCB was under the mentorship of the film director Jean Renoir, after a previously uneventful try at fashion photography in New York. HCBs attempt at filmmaking was, to say the least, less than memorable. After his marriage, perhaps for pragmatic reasons, he may have recognized that his bread-winning talent was with his Leica, recording those decisive moments for which he would become famous. He had to arrive at this point in his career by travelling full circle through various vocations, from his earlier days as an aspiring painter, later to his travels in Africa, (of which little remains photographically due to the ravages of the tropics), then to the time he did his wonderful stills of 1932-34 in Europe, (when he first began using Leicas after abandoning the Krauss), to when he again began to photograph in earnest, taking a job at Ce Soir around 1937, where he became acquainted with Seymour and Capa, who were later to form Magnum shortly after the war. - -GH