Fragile yet powerful, macho yet transgressive, Jacques Audiard’s films portray disabled, marginalised or otherwise non-normative bodies in constant states of crisis and transformation.
Jacques Audiard is the first book on the cinema of one of the most important French directors working today. It studies his screenwriting background, his collaborative practices and his use of genre motifs alongside his reputation as a celebrated French
auteur. Using the motif of border-crossing – both physical and symbolic – the book explores how Audiard’s films construct and transcend boundaries of many forms. Focusing on the representation of the physical body, French society and broader transnational contexts, it reveals how Audiard’s cinema occupies a space both within and beyond the imaginary of French cinema.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Introduction 1 Body: physical boundaries (
De battre mon cœur s’est arrêté,
Sur mes lèvres and
De rouille et d’os) 2 Society: cultural barriers (
Regarde les hommes tomber,
Un prophète and
Un héros très discret) 3 Globe: national borders (
Dheepan and
Les Frères Sisters) Conclusion Index
Über den Autor
Diana Holmes is Professor of French at Keele University