Advertisement
Sign in
Username
Password
Remember me
Forgot password?
Wanna join?
Sign up
Find movies you'll love
Home
Movies
People
Groups
Reviews
Podcasts
News
In theaters
Coming soon
DVDs
Trailers
Watch movies
Sans Soleil (1982)
Want to see it?
Seen it?
0
1
2
3
4
5
Rate this movie.
Want to buy it?
Write a review
Discuss it
Add to lists
Recommend it
Rent it, watch it, find it
Advertisement
Synopsis & activity
Cast & crew
Reviews
Related movies
Synopsis
Titled after a song cycle by Mussorgsky, Sans Soleil is a 1982 nonlinear essay film by elusive documentary filmmaker
Chris Marker
. It's a collage of images gathered from Japan, Africa, Iceland, San Francisco, and France -- all presented without direct sound. The soundtrack consists of occasional spells of electronic music while an unseen woman's voice (
Alexandra Stewart
) narrates letters written by a possibly fictional traveler in poetic verse. Beginning with the phrase "He wrote me," each segment explores some philosophical inquiry of matters as broad as modern culture, technology, consciousness, Japanese television, and even the act of filming itself. Some of the first images include children in Iceland, a ferry in Hokkido, a carnival in Guinea-Bissau, girls in Cape Verde, and a shrine to cats in Tokyo. There's also a creepy JFK robot, petrified animals left by desert drought, and teenagers dancing in a public square. The seemingly miscellaneous footage is made up of archive clips, synthesized video sequences, and some images collected by Marker's colleagues. It's randomly assembled, jumping from one continent to another in the same breath. It remains one of the director's masterpiece accomplishments. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide
Production Crew
Eugenio Bentivoglio
Additional Cinematography
Jean-Michel Humeau
Additional Cinematography
Chris Marker
Cinematographer
Chris Marker
Director
Chris Marker
Editor
Anatole Dauman
Producer
Chris Marker
Screenwriter
Antoine Bonfanti
Sound Mixer
Paul Bertault
Sound Mixer
Year: 1982
Runtime: 100
Country: France
MPAA Rating:
Category: Documentary
Genre
Avant-garde / Experimental
Culture & Society
Produced by
Argos Films
© 2009 Spout LLC. Portions of content provided by All Movie Guide.