Agnes Varda: Interviews
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Her films have finally earned recognition as deeply probing and fundamental to the growing awareness in France of women's issues and the role of women in the cinema. “I'm not philosophical,” she says, “not metaphysical. Feelings are the ground on which people can be led to think about things. I try to show everything that happens in such a way and ask questions so as to leave the viewers free to make their own judgments.” The panoply of interviews here emphasizes her core belief that “we never stop learning” and reveal the wealth of ways to answer her questions.
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Reviews for Agnes Varda
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Book preview
Agnes Varda - T. Jefferson Kline
Chronology
Filmography
LA POINTE COURTE (1954)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Camera: Louis Stein
Editing: Alain Resnais
Sound: Robert Lion
Music: Pierre Barbaud
Cast: Philippe Noiret, Silvia Montfort, the inhabitants of La Pointe
Courte
35mm, 89 minutes, b/w
Awards: Prix de l’Age d’or, Brussels, 1955; Grand Prix du film d’avant-
garde, Paris, 1955
Ô SAISONS, Ô CHATEAUX (1957)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Pierre Braunberger, Films de la Pléiade
Camera: Quinto Albicocco
Editing: Janine Verneau
Music: André Hodeir
Cast: Voice of Antoine Bourseiller
35mm, 22 minutes, color
L’OPÉRA-MOUFFE (1958)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris
Camera: Sacha Vierny
Editing: Janine Verneau
Music: Georges Delerue
Cast: Dorothée Blank, Antoine Bourseiller, André Rousselet, Jean Tasso,
José Varela, Monika Weber
16mm, 17 minutes, b/w
Awards: Prix de la Fédération Internationale des Ciné-Clubs, Brussels
DU CÔTÉ DE LA CÔTE (1958)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Anatole Dauman, Philippe Lifchitz, Argos Films
Camera: Quinto Albicocco
Editing: Henri Colpi, Jasmine Chasney
Music: Georges Delerue
Cast: Voices of Roger Coggio, Anne Olivier
35 mm, 24 minutes, color
Awards: Prix du Film de Tourisme, Brussels, 1959
CLÉO DE 5 À 7 (1961)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris
Camera: Jean Rabier, Alain Levent
Editing: Janine Verneau, Pascale Laverrière
Music: Michel Legrand, Agnès Varda
Cast: Corinne Marchand (Cléo), Antoine Bourseiller (Antoine), Dominique D’Avray (Angèle), Dorothée Blank (Dorothée), Michel Legrand (Bob), José-Luis de Vilallonga (the lover), Loye Payen (the fortune teller), Lucienne Marchand (taxi driver), Serge Korber (le Plumitif) 35mm, 90 mintues, b/w, brief color
Awards: Official Selection for the Festival at Cannes and Venice Film
Festival, 1962; Prix Méliès, 1962
SALUT LES CUBAINS (1963)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Société Nouvelle Pathé-Cinéma
Camera: J. Maques, C. S. Olaf
Editing: Janine Verneau
Music: Michel Legrand
Voice: Michel Piccoli
35mm, 30 minutes, b/w
Awards: Silver Dove Festival of Leipzig; Bronze Medal, XVth International Exposition of Documentary Film, Venice, 1964
LE BONHEUR (1964)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Mag Bodard
Camera: Claude Beausoleil, Jean Rabier
Editing: Janine Verneau
Music: W. A. Mozart, Jean-Michel Defaye
Cast: Jean-Claude Drouot (François), Claire Drouot (Thérèse), Marie-
France Boyer (Emilie)
35mm, 82 minutes, color
Awards: Prix Louis Delluc, 1965; Silver Bear, Berlin, 1965; David
O’Selznick Award
LES ENFANTS DU MUSÉE (1964)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Pathé Cinéma
Video
7 minutes, b/w
ELSA LA ROSE (1965)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris
Camera: Willy Kurant, William Lubtchansky
Music: Simonovitch, Ferrat, Moussorgsky, Gershwin, Handy
16mm, 20 minutes, b/w
LES CRÉATURES (1966)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Mag Bodard
Camera: Willy Durant, William Lubtschansky
Music: Henry Purcell, Pierre Barbaud
Cast: Catherine Deneuve (Mylène), Michel Piccoli (Edgar), Eva Dahlbeck (Michèle Quellec), Marie-France Mignal (Viviane Quellec), Britta Pettersson (Lucie de Moyton), Bernard Lajarrice (Le Docteur Desteau), Roger Dax (Père Quellec)
35mm, 105 minutes, b/w and color
Awards: Official selection at Venice Film Festival, 1966
LOIN DU VIETNAM (1967)
Collective film directed variously by Jean-Luc Godard, Joris Ivens, William Klein, Claude Lelouch, Alain Resnais, Agnès Varda
The episode shot by Varda was not included in the final version of the film, although her name remained in the credits as a participant in the project.
ONCLE YANCO (1967)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screeplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris
Cinematographer: David Meyers, Didier Tarot
Music: Yannos Spanos, Richard Lawrence, Albinoni
Editing: Jean Hamon, Roger Ikhlef
Cast: Agnès Varda, Jean Varda
35mm, 22 minutes, color
BLACK PANTHERS (1968)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Camera: David Myers, John Schofill, Paul Aratow, Agnès Varda
Sound: Paul Oppenheim, James Steward
Music: Soul music improvised by the Black Panthers
Editing: Paddy Monk
16mm, 28 minutes, b/w
Awards: Prize awarded at Festival of Oberhausen, 1970
LIONS LOVE (1969)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris
Camera: Steve Larner, Lee Alexander, William Weaver, Rusty Roland
Sound: George Alch and Y Babbish, George Porter
Music: Joseph Byrd
Cast: Playing themselves: Viva, Jim Rado, Shirley Clarke, Carlos Clarens, Eddie Constantine, Max Laemmle, Steve Kenis, Hal Landers, Billie Dixon, Richard Bright
35mm, 110 minutes, color
NAUSICAA (1970)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: ORTF France
Camera: Charlie Gaeta
Editing: Robert Dalva, Carolyn Hicks
Music: Mikis Theodorakis
Cast: France Dougnac (Agnès), Myriam Boyer (Rosalie), Stavros Tornes (Michel), Catherine de Seynes (Simone), Gérard Dépardieu (a hippie)
35mm, 90 minutes, color
DAGUERRÉOTYPES (1974)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay; Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris, L’Institut de l’audiovisuel et la ZDF (Mainz)
Camera: Rith Aviv, William Lubtchancsky Editing: Gordon Swire
Sound: Antoine Bonifanti, Jean-François Auger
Cast: The neighbors of Agnès Varda on the Rue Daguerre
16mm, 80 minutes, color
Awards: Nominated for Oscar for Feature-Length Documentary, 1975;
Prix du Cinéma d’Art et d’Essai, 1975
RÉPONSE DE FEMMES (1975)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris, Antenne 2—Le Magazine F. Comme Femme
Cinematography: Jacques Reiss, Michel Thiriet
Editing: Marie Castro, Andrée Choty, Hélène Wolf
Sound: Bernard Bleicher
Cast: Various subjects reading Varda’s declarations
16mm, 8 minutes, color
Awards: Nominated for Césars, 1976, in category of Short
Documentaries
PLAISIR D’AMOUR EN IRAN (1976)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris
Camera: Nurith Aviv, Charlie Vandamme
Editing: Sabine Mamou
Sound: Henri Morelle
Cast: Valérie Mairesse (Pomme), Ali Raffi (Ali Darius)
35mm, 6 minutes, color
L’UNE CHANTE, L’AUTRE PAS (1977)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris, Société Française de Production, Institut National de l’Audiovisuel-Contrechamp
Camera: Charlie Vandamme, Nurith Aviv
Editing: Joëlle Van Effenterre
Sound: Herni Morelle
Music: Wertheiimer and Orchidée, Agnès Varda
Cast: Thérèse Liotard (Suzanne), Valérie Mairesse (Pomme), Ali Raffi (Darius), Robert Dadies (Jérôme), Francis Lemaire (Pomme’s father), Jean-Pierre Pellegrin (Doctor Pierre Aubanel), the Group Orchidée
35 mm, 120 minutes, color
Awards: Grand Prize, Festival of Taomina, 1977
QUELQUES FEMMES BULLES (1977)
Director: Marion Sarrault
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris
Editing: Marion Sarrault, Agnès Varda
Music: The Orchidée Group
Video
58 minutes, color
MUR MURS (1980)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris, Antenne 2
Camera: Bernard Auroux, Tom Taplin
Editing: Sabine Mamou, Bob Gould
Sound: Lee Alexander
Music: Buxtehude, Carey, Cruz, Fiddy, Healy, Lauber, Los Illegals, Parker
Cast: The people of Los Angeles
16mm, 81 minutes, color
Awards: France’s Selection for the Cannes Festival in the category Un Certain Regard, 1981; Prize, Festival dei Populi de Florence, 1981; Josef von Sternberg Prize, Mannheim, 1981
DOCUMENTEUR (1981)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris
Camera: Nurith Aviv
Editing: Sabine Mamou
Music: Georges Delerue
Sound: Jim Thornton, Lee Alexander
Cast: Sabine Mamou (Emilie), Mathieu Demy (Martin)
16mm, 63 minutes, color
ULYSSE (1982)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay Agnès Varda
Producer: Garance, Dominique Vignet, François Nocher and Paris Audiovisuel, Antenne 2, C.D.C.
Camera: Jen-Yves Escoffier, Pascal Rabaud
Editing: Marie-Jo Audiard, Hélène de Luze
Sound: Jean-Paul Mugel
35mm, 22 minutes, color
Awards: Selected for the Cannes Festival in the category Un certain regard; César for Best Short Documentary, 1984
UNE MINUTE POUR UNE IMAGE (1983)
Director: Agnès Varda
Producer: Garance, Centre National de la Photographie.
170 spots of two minutes each presenting a different photograph each evening
LES DITES CARIATIDES (1984)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda, with poetry of Charles Baudelaire
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris
Camera: Cyril Lathus, Jean-Pierre Albassy
Editing: Hélène Wolf
Music: Rameau, Offenbach
Cast: Caryatids on buildings in Paris
Video
13 minutes, color
Awards: Official Selection at the Venice Film Festival, 1984; Prize for Best Documentary at the International Festival of Film on Architecture and Urbanism, Lausanne, 1987
7P., CUIS., S. DE B., … A SAISIR (1984)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda, Louis Bec
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris
Camera: Nurith Aviv
Editing: Sabine Mamou
Music: Pierre Barbaud
Cast: Hervé Mangani (the father), Saskia Cohen-Tanugi (the mother), Pierre Esposito (the older son), Catherine de Barbeyrac (the oldest daughter), Folco Chevalier (the suitor)
35mm, 27 minutes, color
SANS TOIT NI LOI (1985)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris
Cinematographer: Patrick Blossier
Editing: Agnès Varda, Patricia Mazuy
Music: Joanna Bruzdowicz
Sound: Jean-Paul Mugel
Cast: Sandrine Bonnaire (Mona), Macha Méril (Madame Landier), Stéphane Freiss (Jean-Pierre, the agronomist), Yolande Moreau (the maid), Patrick Lepczynski (David), Yahiaoui Assouna (Assoun), Joël Fosse (Paulo), Marthe Jarnia (tante Lydie)
35mm, 105 minutes, color
Awards: Lion d’Or, Venice Film Festival, 1985; International Critics’ Prize, Fipresci, 1985; Prix Georges Méliès, 1985; César Award for Best Actress, Sandrine Bonnaire, 1985; Catholic Office of Cinema Prize, 1985; Best Foreign Film Award, American Association of Film Critics, 1986; Best Film, Best Director, Brussels Film Festival, 1986; Best Film, Durban International Film Festival, 1987
T’AS DE BEAUX ESCALIERS, TU SAIS (1986)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris (for the French Cinémathèque)
Camera: Patrick Blossier
Editing: Marie-Jo Audiard
Music: Michel Legrand
Cast: Isabelle Adjani (Isabelle), Agnès Varda (narrator)
35mm, 3 mintues, color
KUNG-FU MASTER (1987)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris
Camera: Pierre Laurent Chenieux
Editing: Marie-Jo Audiard
Sound: Olivier Schwob
Music: Joanna Bruzdowicz
Cast: Jane Birkin (Mary Jane), Mathieu Demy (Julien), Charlotte Gains-bourg (Lucy), Lou Doillon (Lou)
35mm, 78 minutes, color
JANE B. PAR AGNÈS V. (1988)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris with La Sept
Camera: Nurith Aviv, Pierre-Laurent Chenieux
Editing: Agnès Varda, Marie-Jo Audiard
Sound: Olivier Schwob, Jean-Paul Mugel
Music: The Doors, Manfredini, Monteverdi
Cast: Jane Birkin (Herself), Philppe Léotard (the painter), Jean-Pierre Léaud (the angry lover), Farid Chopel (the colonist), Alain Souchon (the reader), Serge Gainsbourg (himself), Laura Betti (Lardy)
35mm, 97 minutes, color
JACQUOT DE NANTES (1990)
Director: Agnès Varda
Sreenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris
Camera: Patick Blossier, Agnès Godard, Georges Strouvé
Editing: Marie-Jo Audiard
Music: Joanna Bruzdowicz
Sound: Jean Pierre Duret, Nicolas Naegelen
Cast: Philippe Maron (Jacquot 1), Edouard Joubeaud (Jacquot 2), Laurent Monnier (Jacquot 3), Brigitte de Villepoix (the mother), Daniel Dublet (Yvon 1), Clémant Delaroche (Yvon 2)
35mm, 118 minutes, b/w & color
LES DEMOISELLES ONT EU 25 ANS (1992)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamais, Mag Bodard (Parc Film), and Gilbert Gold-schmidt (Madeleine Films)
Camera: Stephane Krausz, Georges Strouve, Agnès Varda
Editing: Agnès Varda, Anne-Marie Cotret
Sound: Thierry Ferreux, Jean-Luc Rault-Cheynet, Bernard Seidler
Music: Michel Legrand, Jacques Loussier
Cast: Marc Le Gouard (the teacher), Jacques Camescasse (Corvette captain), Ginette Donce (fisherwoman), Jean-Yves Drapeau (traveler)
16mm, 63 minutes, color
Awards: Golden Plaque Award, Chicago Film Festival, 1993
LES 100 ET 1 NUITS (1995)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Dominique Vignet, Ciné-Tamaris
Camera: Eric Gautier
Editing: Hugues Darmois
Sound: Jean-Pierre Duret, Henri Morelle
Cast: Michel Piccoli (Simon Cinéma), Marcello Mastroianni (the Italian friend), Henri Garcin (Firmin, the butler), Julie Gayet (Camille Mira-lis), Mathieu Demy (Camille), Emmanuel Salinger (Vincent), Anouk Aimée (Anouk), Fanny Ardant (the Star who works at night), Jean-Paul Belmondo (Professeur Bébel), Sandrine Bonnaire (the vagabond), Jean-Claude Brialy (the guide), Alain Delon (himself), Catherine Deneuve (the Fantasy Star), Robert De Niro (her husband), Gérard Depardieu (himself), Harrison Ford (himself), Gina Lollobrigida (Professor Bebel’s wife), Jeanne Moreau (the first ex-wife of Mr. Cinéma), Jane Birkin (herself)
35mm, 101 minutes, color
L’ UNIVERS DE JACQUES DEMY (1995)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Narrator: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris, Canal+
Camera: Stéphane Krausz, Peter Pilafian, Georges Strouvé
Editing: Marie-Jo Audiard
Music: Michel Legrand, Michel Colombier
Cast: Anouk Aimée, Richard Berry, Nino Castelnuovo, Catherine Deneuve, Harrison Ford, Danielle Darrieux, Jeanne Moreau, Michel Piccoli, Françoise Fabian, Jeanne Moreau, Dominique Sanda
35mm, 90 minutes, b/w & color
LES GLANEURS ET LA GLANEUSE (2000)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris
Camera: Agnès Varda, Didier Doussin, Stephane Krausz
Editing: Agnès Varda, Laurent Pineau
Music: Joanna Bruzdowicz, Isabelle Olivier, Agnès Bredel, Richard
Klugman
Cast: Bodan Litnanski, François Wertheimer
35mm, 82 minutes, color
LES GLANEURS ET MOI DEUX ANS APRÈS (2002)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris
Camera: Stéphane Krausz, Agnès Varda
Editing: Agnès Varda
Music: Joanna Bruzdowicz, Georges Delerue, Isabelle Olivier, François Wertheimer
Cast: Macha Makeïeff, Agnès Varda
35mm, 63 minutes, color
LE LION VOLATIL (2003)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris
Camera: Mathieu Vadepied, Xavier Tauvera
Editing: Agnès Varda, Sophie Mandonnet
Sound: Jean-Luc Audy
Music: Joanna Bruzdowicz
Cast: Julie Dépardieu (Clarisse), Frédérick Grassser-Hermé (forutune teller), Silvia Urrutia (first client), David Decron (Lazarus), Bernard Werber (Watchman), Valérie Donzelli (tearful client)
35mm, 11 minutes, b/w & color
YDESSA, LES OURS (2004)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris
Camera: Claire Duguet, John Holosko, Rick Kearney, Markus Seitz
Editing: Thomas Benigni, Jean-Baptiste Morin, Agnès Varda
Sound: Christian Börner, Robert Fletcher, Jason Milligan
Music: Didier Lockwood, Isabelle Olivier
Cast: Ydessa Hendeles (herself)
35mm, 44 minutes, color
DER VIENNALE (2004)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné Tamaris
Camera: Agnès Varda
Editing: Agnès Varda
Cast: Agnès Varda
35mm, 2 minutes, color
QUELQUES VEUVES DE NOIRMOUTIER (2006)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné Tamaris
Camera: Eric Gautier
Editing: Jean-Baptiste Montagut, Agnès Varda
Music: Ami Flammer
Cast: Women of Nourmoutier
35mm, 69 minutes, color
LES PLAGES D’AGNÈS (2008)
Director: Agnès Varda
Screenplay: Agnès Varda
Producer: Ciné-Tamaris
Camera: Julia Fabry, Hélène Louvart, Arlene Nelson, Alain Sakot,
Agnès Varda
Editing: Baptiste Filloux, Jean-Baptiste Morin
Sound: Olivier Schwob, Emmanuel Soland
Music: Laurent Levesque, Joanna Bruzdowicz, Stéphane Vilar
Cast: Agnès Varda, Laure Manceau (Agnès Varda as a girl), Rosalie Varda, Mathieu Demy, Andrée Vilar, Jim McBride, Jane Birkin, Constantin Demy
35 mm, 110 minutes, b/w & color
Agnès Varda: Interviews
Agnès Varda from 5 to 7
Pierre Uytterhoeven / 1962
From Positif, no. 44 (March 1962). Reprinted by permission. Translated by T. Jefferson Kline.
Pierre Uytterhoeven: Let’s talk about La Pointe Courte, that you directed in 1954. Do you still think today that the two themes of the film, treated in such very different styles, can’t be mixed and shouldn’t be?
Agnès Varda: I had a very precise idea when I did La Pointe Courte and that was to propose two themes that weren’t necessarily contradictory but which, placed side by side, were problems which were mutually exclusive. They were: a couple coming to grips with their relationship and, on the other hand, a village trying to resolve certain problems through a collective process.
The film was divided into chapters, so the two themes were never mixed together but I left open the possibility for the spectator to confront them or superpose them. I’ve always thought it was very difficult to integrate one’s private problems with public issues. In Hiroshima, Mon Amour Resnais succeeded beautifully in giving the audience an impression forged from the mixing of these two levels by having the French woman experience a passionate encounter with the Japanese man in Hiroshima. The violence of their encounter resuscitates her memories of her first passion for a German man. In this way the larger social issues are integrated with the private problems of the couple.
PU: But in La Pointe Courte why did you choose to separate these two problems?
AV: The construction of the film was inspired by Faulkner’s The Wild Palms. If you remember, there’s no connection in the novel between the couple, Charlotte and Harry, and the old ex-con from Mississippi. It was neither allegorical nor symbolic, just a feeling you get from reading which moves back and forth between these two stories. It’s up to the reader to be able to reorganize these feelings. It’s exactly like what Resnais is asking of his audience in Marienbad.
The need to integrate a private problem with a larger social issue is also a theme in L’Enclos. In this particular case, the experiences of the two protagonists are but a detail in the larger picture. What I liked about Gatti’s film is that the two characters experience their problem in terms of the camp while at the same time, the camp is thinking about them. But his way of treating the couple and the group is only possible because it is a face-off between two men who are confronted by the same problems faced by all the prisoners in the camp. When it’s a question of love between a man and a woman, it’s more difficult.
PU: So the couple would have to have resolved their personal problems in order to properly belong to the larger social group?
AV: Yes, but I’ve already stated this. A harmonious couple, that is, one that manages to resolve their personal problems, can be integrated into a larger collectivity. (There are, for example, happy couples who are union members.)
What I hoped to show in La Pointe Courte was the paralysis of the couple who can’t seem to shake free of their intellectual and emotional problems, and hence can’t manage to think about their affinity to any group. I wanted my audience to understand that there’s no connection between social issues and private problems. Of course, there does exist a level of