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The world may appear in many guises, depending on the lens through which
it is viewed. To see it through the perspective of film directors from
distant lands, head for Newport Beach libraries, where more than 700
foreign films are available for a seven-day loan.
Popular with film buffs, cinematography students, native speakers and
those looking to brush up on foreign communication skills, the videotape
collection includes selections in languages ranging from French, Italian
and Spanish to Mandarin, Russian, Saami (Lapp) and Wolof (Senegalese).
All are subtitled unless unavailable in a subtitled version; for example,
if the dubbed version is the only one available.
Among numerous classics are such cinematic milestones as “400 Blows,”
Francois Truffaut’s semiautobiographical feature about an abused boy who
uses petty crime as a means of escape from painful family and school
life.
As one of the premier offerings of the French new wave era, the poignant
1959 portrait of Antoine Doinel introduced the character who became a
fixture in Truffaut’s movies.
Francophiles looking for more romantic fare may prefer “The Umbrellas of
Cherbourg,” Jacques Demy’s haunting musical starring ethereal Catherine
Deneuve as the teenage daughter of a woman who owns a Cherbourg umbrella
shop--the role that launched her to international stardom. Or, check out
celebrated filmmaker Jean Renoir’s “Grand Illusion,” a classic treatise
on war and the power of friendship, considered by many critics to be one
of the greatest achievements in film history.
There are somber, albeit stunning masterpieces, such as Ingmar Bergman’s
“Through a Glass, Darkly,” the 1961 Oscar-winner about a woman’s descent
into madness and the inability of her family to mitigate her pain. The
Swedish director dominates Scandinavian selections, with 15 films that
include the treasured “Cries and Whispers,” “Fanny and Alexander” and
“The Seventh Seal.”
Your whole clan should enjoy “Toto the Hero,” a captivating award winner
about a man consumed by the belief he was switched at birth with the rich
neighbor’s boy, who enjoyed the life he should have led. Other family
viewing options are “The White Balloon,” a charming film from Iran about
a 7-year-old girl’s tenacious quest to buy a cherished goldfish for a New
Year’s Day celebration. It provides a beguiling view of life in Tehran.
Among more contemporary offerings there’s “Like Water For Chocolate,” a
sensuous food fable about a young woman whose life is shaped as much by
cooking as by her unyielding mother. Even more recently added to the
collection was “Life is Beautiful,” the most successful foreign language
film in U.S. history, starring rubber-faced funny man Roberto Benigni,
who shapes a simultaneously hilarious and haunting comedy out of the
Holocaust tragedy.
Foreign films available for loan are cataloged in a “videography”
available at all Newport Beach libraries. Find them arranged by language,
with title and director listed.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams in collaboration with
Sara Barnicle.
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