Luc Simon

Luc Simon

  • Born: 1924-7-16
  • Height:
  • Extended Reading
    • Terrill 2022-06-13 23:04:53

      no sense

      Indifferent to this film. I have been thinking about the relationship between the characters, and I can't tell who is who after putting on the armor. In an interview, the director said that "fluctuations of love" bring "rhythm" to the film. It reminds me of Arthur's kingdom and the round table...

    • Bill 2022-06-13 18:09:51

      A must-like story.

      A group of shining knights seemed to pass through the green Boulogne forest. Wherever he went, he became scorched earth.

      This is the beginning of the greatest film.

      Lancelot and Gwennir meet, date, tryst. The mutual love between the great samurai and the queen transcends the etiquette of the world....

    • Lucinda 2022-06-13 21:14:39

      1. Bresson is good at controlling the time axis, and this is the most obvious performance. Compared with the letters, the use of stacked mirrors makes the delay shots blend with the compressed shots to achieve maximum audio-visual impact, with different color transitions. 2. Lights, shadows, and repetitive voices also join Bresson's concise narrative. 3. Bresson abandons empiricism in filmmaking, but the "completion" of his films relies on the habitual thinking of the audience, that is, to see the body in point.

    • Jacey 2022-06-13 17:46:23

      After reading it several times, it is not easy to evaluate it. Let’s talk about a few points. There are several handheld and zoom lenses for the first time. This one, together with "May be the Devil" and "Money", can be said to be a set of "apocalyptic trilogy". Although the cruel world and the absence of God are also evident in Bresson's previous films, there is a little more here: the absence of the sublime. The Holy Grail, Wu Virtue, Unity, and Love all fell apart. The degeneration of the samurai class is obvious, but it is interesting that the children of the peasant women who housed the wounded Lansinoh leaned over and kissed the land as they watched Lansinoh, as if they were still charming and divine in the eyes of the commoners. Three points in the ending: The two scenes where the Queen leaves Lansinoh and runs to King Arthur are very similar to those in "Four Nights at the Dreamer" where Matt leaves Jacques and runs to the old tenant; "New Testament - Revelation - Chapter 9 and other chapters", there are not only terrible horses in the scriptures, but also terrible horse troops; suppressing the birds in the air can be reminiscent of the pigeons and dogs at the end of "The Judgment of Joan of Arc" , although Bresson says they have no superfluous meaning, but a spectator feeling that "the world has become purgatory" is shocking.

    Lancelot of the Lake quotes

    • La Reine (The Queen): Take this heart, take this soul. They belong to you.

      Lancelot du Lac: It is your body I want.

      La Reine (The Queen): Take this forbidden body. Take it, revive it.