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Bonjour Cinéma (1921)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2021

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Summary

Introduction

Bonjour Cinéma, published in October 1921, features at its center a set of essays Epstein had published in film journals earlier in the same year and then revised for this collection. The first of these articles, “Grossissement,” appeared in Epstein's own arts journal Promenoir in the February/March issue; “Le Cinéma Mystique” (renamed here “Ciné Mystique”) and “Le Sens 1 bis” appeared in Louis Delluc's magazine Cinéa in the spring and summer of that year. Surrounding this core of essays is every manner of textual, poetic, and graphic play: in addition to several poems and pithy statements about the cinema, the slim volume includes pages whose designs derive from the world of movie fandom (posters, programs, fan magazines, music sheets, etc.) and several drawings both by Claude Dalbanne and Epstein himself. Bonjour Cinéma simultaneously sketches out several of the issues that were deeply important to the development of Epstein's theory of film – photogénie among them – and pays homage to popular moviegoing through an exuberant, infectiously enthusiastic approach to cinema.

– Sarah Keller

Continuous Screenings [1921]

Translated by Sarah Keller

[Jean Epstein, “Séances continuelles,” Bonjour Cinéma (Paris: Éditions de la Sirène, 1921), pp. 13-15.]

Continuous Screenings

In close-up

pale sunshine

this face reigns

The enamel mouth stretches out

like a lazy awakening

then turns laughter upside down

up to the edge of the eyes

Without good-byes the waltz retreats

I am taking you, cinema,

and your china wheels

which I feel when I embrace

your trembling enduring

skin, so close,

spread out in the arc-light glare

How beautiful this lantern is

which repeats its dramatic light –

I have seen your 1 2 3 step

moving away on the lawns

and your silent laughter

which rushes toward me

full in the face

The gallop of flight

escaping into the cab –

hooves trample,

the auditorium, tango air,

Pursuit in the saddle

driving over the hill

In the dust, the heroine

reloads her gun

Next to a man

I walked through the snow

everything against his back

an eye on his coat

He was running along with great strides

without turning his head

he feared it was getting cold

Type
Chapter
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Jean Epstein
Critical Essays and New Translations
, pp. 277 - 280
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2012

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