Culture
Classics of Pagan Cinema: La Belle et La Bête
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In the first of a new occasional series, weekend editor Eric O. Scott looks back at Jean Cocteau’s 1946 classic, La Belle et la Bête, with an eye to its Pagan themes.
The Wild Hunt (https://wildhunt.org/tag/cinema)
In the first of a new occasional series, weekend editor Eric O. Scott looks back at Jean Cocteau’s 1946 classic, La Belle et la Bête, with an eye to its Pagan themes.
Lyonel Perabo reviews the new film “The Northman,” directed by Robert Eggers, which features striking historical fidelity in its story of Viking Age revenge.
I am starting this journey in the early days of American cinema; from its inception in 1895 through its development into a viable culturally-influential industry. I’ve dated this period as “pre-1939.” Many of you will recognize 1939 as being the release date of Metro Goldwyn Mayer (MGM)’s classic film The Wizard of Oz, a film that contains the most iconic Hollywood witch in American cultural history. From 1895 to 1916 moving pictures were just a technical novelty. As film historian Jeanine Basinger said, “No one really took movies very seriously. It was thought that they were a fad.” Most early movies depicted actual events, landscape photography, historical re-enactments or popular stories.