Françoise Romane - Mixup ou Meli-Melo (1985)
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- Video > Movies
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- 2
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- 699.21 MiB (733172582 Bytes)
- Spoken language(s):
- English
- Uploaded:
- 2007-12-09 22:04:31 GMT
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- clownmonkey
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- Info Hash: 6462579379A4DE319B1941A6F41D01DE9B527FE5
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One of the most remarkable and innovative documentaries ever made, this film by Fran���§oise Romand follows the famous true story of two English women who as babies got switched in the hospital and 20 years later discovered that they\\\'d been raised by the wrong sets of parents. Romand enlists all the surviving family members in her haunting and bizarre investigation, which involves not only a recounting but a reenactment of all the significant events in the two daughters\\\' emotional histories. The seriousness and thoroughness with which she pursues her approach create a formal beauty and a witty precision in framing, pacing, editing, use of music, and mise en scene that is inseparable from the film\\\'s ethical and philosophical project... The \\\"mix-up\\\" of the title refers not only to the putative subject but to many stylistic and formal collisions: fiction versus fact, French versus English, memory versus imagination. *** Francoise Romand\\\'s 1985, 63-minute Mix-Up, as densely packed as a 500-page novel, has the French title Meli-melo, which my dictionary defines as a \\\"jumble (of facts, etc); hotchpotch; medley (of people, etc); clutter (of furniture)\\\"--all of which describes the film\\\'s startlingly original method as well as its fascinating, evocative subject. In November 1936, at a nursing home in Nottingham, England, two middle-class women, Margaret Wheeler and Blanche Rylatt, gave birth to two daughters. Through a mix-up in the files, each woman was presented with the wrong baby afterward--a fact confirmed only in 1957 after strenuous efforts by Margaret, who had suspected something was amiss from the beginning and retained a rudimentary contact with the Rylatts as a consequence. At this point, each 20-year-old daughter--Peggy, who had grown up with the Rylatts, and Valerie, who had grown up with the Wheelers--discovered that she had a different set of parents. Romand\\\'s major coup is to have enlisted the entire Wheeler and Rylatt families in her project--not merely to recount the story with all its complex ramifications, but to reenact it at crucial stages, using the original participants playing themselves at various ages, and reflecting in the present about what the whole experience meant and did to them. (Exceptions to this rule include Blanche\\\'s husband Fred, who died in 1975; Peggy and Valerie as infants and toddlers; and, in a few abstract episodes set around parallel and diverging railroad tracks, the girls as preadolescents.) To make this enterprise even stranger, Romand stages and orders these scenes in a highly stylized manner, visually, aurally, and conceptually, in the families\\\' homes and surrounding locations. As a consequence of these strategies, one watches much of Mix-Up in a kind of stupefied awe and amazement. One first tries to figure out how Romand managed to convince both of these proper English families to cooperate in such a bizarre avant-garde concoction. One then is further awed and amazed to gradually realize that Romand\\\'s radical subversion of documentary conventions is strictly functional in exploring the implications and nuances of her subject. Indeed, the mix-up of the title refers not only to the switched babies but, in Romand\\\'s dazzling presentation, to the confusions between fact and imagination, English and French sensibilities (the film was made bilingually for French TV), emotion and analysis, past and present, and tragedy and comedy. Jonathan Rosenbaum (http://www.romand.org/imagespresse/FormCountsJR.htm) ************************* FREAKYFLICKS ************************** Freakyflicks is a free and open community dedicated to preserving and sharing cinematic art in the digital era. Our goal is to disseminate such works of art to the widest audience possible through the channels provided by P2P technology. The Freakyflicks collection is limited to those films that have played an exceptional role in the history of cinema and its progression in becoming a great art. Films that are usually described as classic, cult, arthouse and avant-garde. If you have films that fit this description feel free to share them and participate in our community. All you need do is include this tag in your upload and join us at the forum to announce your release. \\\'If we all seed just 1:1, give at least what we take, this torrent will NEVER DIE\\\'
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