
Ripping Open the Set
French Film Design, 1930-1939
Ben McCann(Author)
Peter Lang Verlag
Published on 7. May 2013
Book
Paperback/Softback
254 pages
978-3-03910-311-9 (ISBN)
Description
French film design throughout the 1930s was not just descriptive, but also expressive: sets were not merely part of the background, but were vital components of a film's overall atmosphere, impact and critical afterlife. This was a period when sets were 'ripped open', as painted backdrops were replaced by three-dimensional constructions to ensure greater proximity to reality. Accomplished set designers such as Alexandre Trauner, Jacques Krauss and Eugène Lourié crafted a series of designs both realist and expressionistic that brought out the underlying themes of a film's narrative and helped create an exportable vision of 'Frenchness' that influenced other European and American film design practices.
This book details the elaborate paraphrasing tendencies of French film design in the 1930s. The author explores the crucial role of the set designer in the film's evolutionary process and charts how the rapid development of studio practices enabled designers to become progressively more ambitious. The book examines key films such as Quatorze juillet (1932), Un Carnet de bal (1937), La Grande illusion (1937) and Le Jour se lève (1939) to demonstrate how set design works at establishing time and place, generating audience familiarity and recognition and underpinning each film's visual style.
Reviews / Votes
<<This is a superbly researched book that adds a welcome new perspective to scholarship on production design, ?lm history, and the French studios of the 1930s.>>(Sue Harris, French Studies 70, 3 2016)
<<McCann's characterisations and descriptions are vivid, clear, and evocative, and carry a pictorial weight. His study is valuable both for its specific considerations of films and designers, and for the broader questions it provokes about the role of production design in the film-making process.>>
(Philippa Hawker, Australian Book Review 2/2014)
<<Ben McCann has given us a fascinating and highly readable book that excels in its sharp close viewing style, its vibrant description of visual detail, and its focus on the specificity of set design and the contributions of particular designers to classic French cinema. After each chapter, readers will doubtless find themselves, as I did, wanting to return to these well-known films for a closer look.>>
(Alison J. Murray Levine, H-France Review 14/2014)
More details
Series
Edition
New edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Peter Lang Group AG, International Academic Publishers
Edition type
New edition
Illustrations
15 b/w, 1 tabl.
Dimensions
Height: 225 mm
Width: 150 mm
Thickness: 15 mm
Weight
381 gr
ISBN-13
978-3-03910-311-9 (9783039103119)
DOI
10.3726/978-3-0353-0466-4
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
06/2013
250th Edition
Peter Lang Verlag
€101.49
Available for download
Person
Ben McCann is Senior Lecturer in French Studies at the University of Adelaide. He is the co-editor of The Cinema of Michael Haneke (2011) and the author of Le Jour se lève (2013). He is currently writing a book on the French director Julien Duvivier.
Content
Contents: 1930s Set Design: Contexts and Practices - 1930s Set Design: Conventions and Codes - 1930s Designers: Praxis in Practice - The Poetic Realist Set - Micro-Design: Action Spaces and Objects - Cityscapes: Paris Plays Itself.