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Synopsis

As with his earlier Trial of Joan of Arc, French-filmmaker Robert Bresson effectively casts unknowns in his interpretation of the Knights of the Round Table saga. Breaking with the standard romantic spin on this legend, Bresson offers us a selfish, ruthless Lancelot, no better than the other grubby “nobles” who seek but fail to find the Holy Grail. Returning from his futile mission, Lancelot callously renews his affair with King Arthur’s Guenevere, who likewise is depicted in less than sympathetic terms. Expectedly, the dream of “Camelot” is dashed to bits; Bresson argues that Camelot was never any more than a dream—or rather, a delusion. The mudcaked cinematography of Pasqualino de Santis adds to the iconoclastic flavor of Lancelot of the Lake.

(From http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=A98592)

Director

Robert_bresson

Robert Bresson

Often described as a “painter” of films, French director Robert Bresson was one of cinema’s greatest anomalies. He directed only 13 films over the course of 40 years, but these films were in a category all their own, minimalist works that tended towards radical (and sometimes controversial) reinterpretations of such classical sources as Diderot, Dostoyevsky, and Tolstoy. An expert manipulator of narrative incident, Bresson focused on seemingly incidental details of the stories he told and used amateur actors (whom he called ’models’) lacking any trace of theatricality, creating searching meditations on the quality of transcendence, spirituality, and alienation. Of the artistic influences inherent in his work – perhaps most apparent in his belief that the cinema is a fusion of music and painting, not the theatre and photography – Bresson once said “Art is not a luxury, but a vital necessity.”

The year of Bresson’s birth has often been subject to debate; his biographer, Philippe… read more

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IA

30Jul09

This is the best Arthurian film: Bresson fully captures the crepuscular feel of the later parts of the Lancelot-Grail Vulgate.   
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Border Radio

2Mar09

Yeeeeeeeeeeeeees first review! Get in Bresson you ba-you-tay!!!  

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By moonmas​ter9000 on July 25, 2009

Audiences have a very clear set of expectations from film adaptations of the Arthurian legend. Chivalry, adventure, romance, shining armor. Dashing knights and deliciously bountiful bosoms. Movies…  read review

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