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The Seashell and the Clergyman

Directed by Germaine Dulac

Blood of a Poet

Directed by Jean Cocteau
  • The Seashell and the Clergyman (La Coquille et le clergyman)

    Directed by Germaine Dulac.
    With Alix Allin.
    France, 1926, black & white, silent, 44 min.

Feminist filmmaker and writer Germaine Dulac provides a distinctly lyrical interpretation of a text by Antonin Artaud. British censors banned the film with the edict, “If this film has a meaning, it is doubtless objectionable.”

  • Blood of a Poet (Le sang d'un poète)

    Directed by Jean Cocteau.
    With Lee Miller, Pauline Carton, Odette Talazac.
    France, 1930, black & white, 58 min.
    French with English subtitles.

In his first foray into film, artist and poet Jean Cocteau created this vivid and highly personal portrait of “the poet’s inner self,” filled with signature images of beauty, suffering, and renewal. While composed in four distinct episodes, the action of the film ostensibly takes place in the brief moment between the collapse of a chimney and its hitting the ground.

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