The Lost Sorrows of Jean Eustache
Directed by Angel Diaz
The Garden of Delights of Hieronymus Bosch
Directed by Jean Eustache
This beautiful film essay explores three themes in Eustache’s work: cinema, absence, and mourning. Both inquiry and requiem, The Lost Sorrows of Jean Eustache offers a complex portrait of a mysterious and mercurial artist.
In this unconventional work, Eustache’s friend and collaborator Jean-Noël Picq, the happy scopophiliac of A Dirty Story, describes Bosch’s famous painting “The Garden of Delights.” Rejecting traditional readings in favor of a “pure play of the eye” over the canvas, Picq’s oblique analysis makes us wonder, ultimately, if his account concurs with or contradicts the imagery we see.