Fireworks Logo

Trailers...

  • Christophers (The)
  • Marc by Sofia
  • Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma
  • Touch Me
  • Champion
  • Este cuerpo mío
  • Narciso
  • Another Man
  • River Dreams
  • Animol
  • Surfacing
  • Sunny Dancer
  • Black Burns Fast
  • Warla
  • Beyond the Fire: The Life of Japan’s First Pride Parade Pioneer
  • To Dance is to Resist
  • Ugly Stepsister (The)
  • West of Greatness: The Story of the Westwego Muscle Boys
  • Washed Up
  • These Sacred Vows
  • Deepest Space in Us (The)
  • ìfé: (The Sequel)
  • Mickey & Richard
  • On the Sea
  • Madfabulous
  • Outlasting - Living Archives of Older Queers
  • Beast in Me (The)
  • God Will Not Help
  • Mistake
  • Oh. What. Fun.
  • Where Comes Mulan
  • There Was Such a Thing Before
  • Isan Odyssey
  • Far from Maine
  • Belle Année (La)
  • Songs of Hope and Despair.
  • Thanks for Nothing
  • Girls Like Girls
  • Trial of Hein
  • Rosebush Pruning

EA3

Country: France, Language: French, 42 mins

  • Director: Vincent Dieutre
  • Writer: Adolfo Arrieta; Jean Cocteau

CGiii Comment

In September 2008, at the crack of dawn, a small film crew met in a house in Provence to give substance to a memory. During his childhood, whilst watching television, Vincent Dieutre heard Jean Cocteau’s La Voix humaine—created by Berthe Bovy with the Comédie française in 1930. He set out to find what so troubled him at the time in this “firestorm of words” and shot a “clandestine, feverish film” as an exercise in admiration as night falls. Jacques Nolot plays the role originally intended for an actress. The main plot remains unchanged: after a few unsuccessful attempts, a man reaches the person he intends to speak with on their (mobile) phone and starts a patchy garbled conversation. He makes a final declaration of love that is disrupted by technical problems. Nolot’s performance ends with the reading of a letter that the filmmaker addresses to Cocteau’s rights-holders, who were disturbed by the “queerisation” of the work, in which he recalls Cocteau’s tendency to “twist works” and that this play is “not a story of a man, or a woman, but a pure story of love.”


No trailer...

Cast & Characters

Jacques Nolot