René Viénet

René Viénet Trailers

Autoportrait TrailerOne More Effort, Chinamen, if you want to be revolutionaries! TrailerMao by Mao Trailer

René Viénet is a French sinologist who is famous as a situationist writer and filmmaker. Viénet used the situationist technique of détournement — the diversion of already existing cultural elements to new subversive purposes. After completing his studies in Sinology in Paris, he moved to China but he was expelled in 1966 for his critical approach towards the Maoist regime. In the 1970s, he worked at CNRS from where he was fired on two different occasions in 1971 and 1978 for heavily criticising those who defended Mao, particularly through the books from the publishing house Champ libre where he directed the series Bibliothèque asiatique. From 1974 to 1978, he also taught Chinese at the École polytechnique. After 20 years spent in Mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan, he returned to France. He is the director of redaction for the review Monde chinois since 2007.

Most Popular René Viénet Trailers

Total trailers found: 5

Girls of Kamare Trailer (1974)

17 July 1974

A Situationist film by Rene Vienet that juxtaposes musings on film, censorship, and society with Japanese pinky film Terrifying Girls' High School: Lynch Law Classroom.

Autoportrait Trailer (2020)

01 January 2020

Can Dialectics Break Bricks? Trailer (1973)

08 March 1973

A Hong Kong martial arts movie redubbed by situationist René Viénet. The narrative focuses on a conflict between proletarians and bureaucrats within state capitalism.

One More Effort, Chinamen, if you want to be revolutionaries! Trailer (1977)

01 October 1977

Unlike his earlier films "Can Dialectics Break Bricks?" and "The Girls of Kamare", which "detourned" drama films, in this one, Viénet uses a great variety of sources (particularly archive footage of People's Republic of China leaders) to compose a political documentary sharply critical of Mao's legacy in China.

Mao by Mao Trailer (1977)

01 May 1977

A film-détournement biography of Mao Tse-tung in which the life of the recently deceased Great Helmsman is told in his own words, using quotes culled from various Red Guard publications.