☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
Day for Night (1973) -- F. Truffaut
I don't know how real
movies are made but I love watching movies about movie-making. The challenges of moving from
concept/idea/script to its practical realization in front of the camera is
endlessly fascinating and, of course, movies in this tradition are always
focused on the troubles that ensue.
Whereas Fellini's 8 1/2 sees the director stuck for ideas, Truffaut's
more minor (but still endearing) work shows the director trying to hold a
motley cast and crew together while they over-react to relationship dramas on
the sidelines and downgrade (or upgrade) their expectations about what kind of
film is going to be accomplished. The
moneymen are barely kept at bay. Truffaut brings a lot of anecdotes from his
own career to the table (e.g., working with a cat) and also pays tribute to
some of his favorite filmmakers. Similar in some ways to Richard Rush's The
Stuntman (1980) although with a much more sedate director (played by Truffaut
himself), this is an affectionate depiction of the passion that is required to
get a movie made.
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