Kate Ince
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Mise-en-scène and the art of the real
Franju’s cinematic aesthetics
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This chapter explores the aesthetics of Georges Franju's cinema, both courts métrages and feature films and summarises and combines the insights of the critics to construct a new synthesis of thinking about Franju's aesthetics. It explores recurrent features in Franju's homo cinematographicus: his tendency to frame the head and face separately from the body; his interest in the topos of facelessness and the mask; his extensive use of isolating shots and close-ups of faces, and his 'facialising' of animals and non-human entities. In Franju's three adaptations of novels, décor is also often instrumental in creating atmosphere: Franju films the rooms of Bernard Desqueyroux's house as austere and even drab, in keeping with the stolid unimaginativeness of his character. However, décor is perhaps less important than other aspects of mise-en-scène and cinematography, in particular the use made of black and white and of colour respectively.

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