Monthly Archives: March 2020

(film) Bob le Flambeur (1956)

We watched another JP Melville film on Mubi yesterday evening. This time it was the noir heist thriller, Bob le Flambeur from 1956. Flambeur is French slang for a compulsive high-roller.

By modern standards, the film was a little slow…that’s what the new wave did, it speeded things up.

But, I loved the scene-setting in Pigalle, with the girls, clubs and night-life. The screengrab, above, shows the metro station with the famous St Raphael drink advertisement by Charles Loupot. There were great cars and wonderful clothes too, and plenty of night neon and shopfronts. Great 1950s street typography and signage.

The climax of the film takes place at Deauville, on the Normandy coast.

Like in all film noir, the female characters are both wonderful and dangerous…

(art doc) The Age of Images BBC4TV

My friend, Dr James Fox, is presenting as series of films on BBC4TV called, The Age of Images.
The programme website is, here
https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m000fzm9/age-of-the-image-series-1-1-a-new-reality
This series covers exactly the ground that I have introduced in stage one (inside the image machine), and in stage two (U8) and stage three (U10).
The conceptual architecture of field, frame and optics, is even included in the structure of these programmes.
These films are a must watch.

James Fox is an art historian, so he is more interested in individual artists responding to the acceleration of modernity and the attendant fracturing of experience and image…rather than the structural relation between organisation, acceleration and image.

If you follow the links, there is an OU page about the history of lenses and optics, here
https://www.open.edu/openlearn/society-politics-law/sociology/brief-history-the-lens?in_menu=1017673
Technology and art have always been connected, from the first tools and pigments used to make prehistoric cave art, to the present-day questions that artists ask of our relationship to the world around us.