Patrice Énard

Patrice Énard Trailers

Scoundrel in White Trailer

Énard made his first short films in the mid-1960s. From the outset, his provocative style, stripped of all psychology, attests to the fact that he was part of the generation that launched the French protests of May ‘68. Invested in the dialectic of disobedience, his films constantly question their immersion in the ideological context of the time, in order to better escape it. Énard’s cinematic expression evolved toward a fundamentally analytical and experimental form of cinema. Driven by his increasingly personal reflections, he developed his own language and perfected it through the prism of an atypical, radical esthetic. His later films could be described as a form of cinema-poetry. He raised the bar higher and higher.

Most Popular Patrice Énard Trailers

Total trailers found: 13

Différences et répétitions I Trailer (1970)

01 January 1970

1967, 1968, 1969, 1970 Trailer (1970)

01 January 1970

Double Life Trailer (1980)

10 July 1980

Erika Blanc self-reflectively narrates her descent into Italian genre cinema while she hyperbolically playacts in the woods.

Scoundrel in White Trailer (1972)

29 September 1972

Paul, a former womanizer, marries the head of the medical department's "unattractive" daughter Christine because he thinks attractive women can't be trusted and make poor wives.

Le cinéma en deux Trailer (1972)

01 January 1972

Parcours Trailer (1968)

01 January 1968

Différences et répétitions III Trailer (1972)

01 January 1972

Différences et répétitions II Trailer (1971)

01 January 1971

Pourvoir Trailer (1982)

29 August 1982

Patrice Enard’s ‘Pourvoir’ is a film mainly comprised of images of women in nature, his style is stark and repetitive, shots are angular, which both hide and reveal.

La parole en deux Trailer (1973)

01 January 1973

Né Trailer (1975)

05 November 1975

F... comme phantasme(s) Trailer (1977)

28 June 1977

Les Écrans déchirés Trailer (1976)

01 January 1976

What happens to the actors when they are left to their own devices? How to tear the screen of conventional cinema?