Georges Franjus La tête contre les murs im September 2009 bei Masters of Cinema

masters-of-cinema-83-dvd-la-tete-contre-les-mursBereits im Juni hatte das britische Label Masters of Cinema per Twitter auf eine Veröffentlichung von Georges Franjus Regiedebut “Mit dem Kopf gegen die Wände [aka: Schrei gegen Mauern] / La tête contre les murs [aka: Head against the Wall]” [F 1959] aufmerksam gemacht. Mittlerweile liegen die Details zur DVD vor. Eine Blu-ray-Veröffentlichung ist derzeit nicht geplant.

An intense study of the clash between medical ideals, the first full-length work from Georges Franju (Les yeux sans visage, Judex) is a gripping examination of postwar psychiatric care, boasting a memorable cast including Pierre Brasseur, Anouk Aimée, Charles Aznavour, Paul Meurisse, and Jean-Pierre Mocky.

Mocky plays François Gérane, an aimless young man whose delinquent tendencies cause his father to have him committed to a psychiatric ward. There, under the cold command of Dr. Varmont (Brasseur), he finds himself fighting for his dignity, sanity, and freedom, barely holding on through the new-found love of his girlfriend Stephanie (Aimée) and the promise of rival Dr. Emery’s (Meurisse) more humane techniques.

Compassionate yet unflinching, La Tête contre les murs is a bold precursor to the likes of Samuel Fuller’s Shock Corridor and Milos Forman’s One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest, revealing Franju’s poetic gift for creating images both concrete and evocative, and an ominous hint of the clinical horrors yet to come in Les yeux sans visage. The Masters of Cinema Series is proud to present the debut feature of a late-flowering, great filmmaker.

  • New high-definition transfer from pristine restored materials
  • Newly translated optional English subtitles
  • Original French theatrical trailer
  • A new video interview with Jean-Pierre Mocky filmed in 2008
  • A new video interview with Charles Aznavour filmed in 2008
  • 48-page booklet containing newly-translated interviews with Georges Franju, newly-translated writing by Jean-Luc Godard, and an article by Raymond Durgnat (author of Franju).

Schreib doch was!