Historia kina.Waluta absolutu.Histoire(s) du cinéma.La monnaie de l'absolu.1998 - angielskie napisy.txt

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{396}{434}It has become necessary
{439}{491}to inform European governments
{496}{555}of a fact so small
{560}{617}they don't seem aware of it.
{622}{683}A population is being assassinated.
{688}{749}Where? In Europe.|Are there witnesses?
{757}{799}One witness: The world.
{804}{862}Do the governments see this? No.
{1398}{1514}Nations have something above them|which is beneath them: Governments.
{1519}{1577}Sometimes this contradiction is blatant.
{1582}{1687}Civilization is in the people.|Barbarity is in the leaders.
{1692}{1740}Is this barbarity intentional? No.
{1745}{1785}Simply professional.
{1808}{1877}Governments ignore|what humanity knows.
{1882}{1966}Governments can only be shortsighted:
{1971}{2005}Reason of State.
{2012}{2059}Humanity sees with another eye:
{2064}{2085}Conscience.
{2225}{2285}European governments|will be surprised
{2290}{2358}to learn this:|Crimes are crimes.
{2378}{2451}Governments have no more right|than people
{2456}{2480}to murder.
{2485}{2532}Europe shows solidarity.
{2539}{2612}Everything done in Europe|is done by Europe.
{2631}{2670}A government of beasts
{2675}{2737}must be treated like a beast.
{2768}{2812}At this moment, not far,
{2817}{2902}people are slaughtering,|setting fires, pillaging,
{2907}{2949}slitting parents' throats
{2954}{3004}selling girls and boys.
{3038}{3070}The youngest
{3075}{3123}are felled with swords.
{3128}{3178}Families are burnt in their homes.
{3183}{3286}In a few hours, Balak's 9000 inhabitants
{3291}{3329}were reduced to 1300.
{3334}{3428}Cemeteries are so full,|bodies cannot be buried.
{3433}{3509}The dead send the plague to the living
{3514}{3564}who sent them to slaughter.
{3592}{3654}We inform European governments
{3659}{3755}the bellies of pregnant woman|are being ripped open.
{3760}{3879}In public places are skeletons|of women's bodies, torn asunder.
{3891}{3963}Dogs gnaw at the skulls|of raped girls.
{3968}{4005}All this is horrible.
{4010}{4095}A gesture from European governments|could stop it.
{4100}{4177}Those who commit these crimes|are terrifying.
{4182}{4261}Those who let them be committed|are vile.
{4352}{4448}Governments stammer.|They've tried stuttering before.
{4453}{4501}They say we are exaggerating.
{4506}{4541}Yes, we are.
{4546}{4657}Balak wasn't exterminated|in a few hours, but in a few days.
{4662}{4756}Two hundred villages weren't burned.|Only ninety-nine were.
{4761}{4824}It's not the plague,|just typhoid fever.
{4829}{4913}Not all the women were raped.|Not all the girls were sold.
{4918}{4949}Some escaped.
{4961}{5035}Castrated prisoners|were beheaded first,
{5040}{5086}making it a lesser evil.
{5091}{5160}The boy thrown from spike to spike
{5165}{5234}was just speared with a bayonet.
{5297}{5339}Et cetera, et cetera.
{5625}{5687}And why did those people revolt?
{5692}{5802}Why can't a flock of men be owned|like a flock of cattle?
{5809}{5865}Et cetera, et cetera.
{5887}{5953}Speaking this way|adds to the horror.
{5958}{6045}Haggling over public indignation|is pathetic.
{6058}{6189}Toning down makes things worse:|Subtlety pleading in favor of barbarity.
{6210}{6281}Let's call a spade a spade:|Killing a man
{6286}{6370}in Bondy Forest or the Black Forest|is a crime.
{6375}{6460}Killing a race|in the forest of diplomacy
{6465}{6537}is a crime too.|A bigger one. That's all.
{6570}{6606}Where will it end?
{6614}{6700}When will that heroic nation's|ordeal be over?
{6715}{6781}We're told we forget certain questions.
{6786}{6887}Killing a man is a crime.|Killing a race is a question.
{6908}{6973}Each government has its question.
{6978}{6999}We answer:
{7004}{7058}Humanity has its question too.
{7110}{7179}Bigger than India, England, Russia.
{7194}{7255}It is the baby in its mother's belly.
{7692}{7771}The Holy Book tells us|that before leaving,
{7794}{7869}Lot's daughters|wanted one last look back.
{7893}{7948}They were turned into salt.
{8012}{8056}We only film the past.
{8066}{8121}That is, what passes.
{8155}{8218}And silver salts fix the light.
{8693}{8727}No stories...
{8732}{8776}when I was inventing.
{8808}{8837}Stories...
{8873}{8914}when I invent nothing.
{8963}{9011}What stories, exactly?
{9016}{9062}The battle of Borodino
{9067}{9176}and the end of the French domination,|as told by Tolstoy.
{9181}{9261}The battle of Baghdad,|as told by CNN.
{9294}{9386}The triumph of American television|and its groupies.
{9787}{9848}A German, Erich Pommer,
{9862}{9903}founder of Universal
{9916}{9968}- Matsushita Electronics, today -
{9994}{10088}exclaimed: "I'll make|the world cry in their seats!"
{10120}{10166}Maybe he did.
{10197}{10256}Newspapers and TV stations
{10261}{10339}show only death and tears.
{10352}{10460}On the other hand,|people who watch television all day
{10476}{10513}have no more tears to cry.
{10536}{10581}They've unlearned how to look.
{10975}{11017}What story do we want?
{11030}{11113}<i>Supposing we are still worthy|of The Charterhouse</i>
{11118}{11174}and of crimes and punishment.
{11188}{11238}David O. Selznick demanded:
{11245}{11377}"I want Del Rio and Tyrone Power|in a South Seas romance.
{11391}{11502}<i>"Any story will do, as long as|it's called Birds of Paradise</i>
{11512}{11597}"and it ends with Del Rio|jumping into a volcano!"
{16983}{17022}I was alone, lost,
{17027}{17068}in my thoughts.
{17082}{17153}<i>I was holding a book:|Manet by Bataille.</i>
{17208}{17309}Manet's women seem to say:|"I know what you're thinking."
{17326}{17416}Probably because until Manet|- Malraux taught me this -
{17442}{17530}inner reality was more subtle|than the cosmos.
{17573}{17656}The famous, pale smiles|of da Vinci and Vermeer
{17661}{17718}first say: "Me, me."
{17730}{17767}The world comes after.
{17800}{17879}Even Corot's woman in pink|doesn't think
{17884}{17921}the thoughts of Olympia,
{17942}{17984}of Berthe Morisot,
{18013}{18074}of the Folies-Berg?re barmaid.
{18131}{18186}Because finally, the world within
{18203}{18246}has opened out to the cosmos.
{18271}{18352}With Manet begins modern painting:|That is,
{18363}{18398}the cin?matographe.
{18453}{18514}Forms making their way|toward speech.
{18536}{18612}Precisely: A form which thinks.
{18679}{18795}Cinema was first made for thinking.|This would soon be forgotten.
{18800}{18842}But that's another story.
{18879}{18954}The flame went out for good|in Auschwitz.
{18984}{19062}This thought is worth|at least a farthing.
{19139}{19209}I was alone,|lost in my thoughts.
{19232}{19321}Then Zola came along|with his eternal camera.
{19326}{19429}<i>He ended Nana with these words:|"To Berlin! To Berlin!"</i>
{19442}{19494}Then Catherine Hessling arrived.
{19509}{19583}Forty years and two wars after Zola,
{19593}{19636}she took the train to Berlin.
{19677}{19746}The first co-production|with the UFA.
{19751}{19805}<i>The last was Quai des Brumes.</i>
{19811}{19862}But Goebbels upset everything.
{19872}{19926}He disliked Mich?le Morgan's eyes.
{21728}{21796}Alas, I was alone in thinking
{21801}{21887}that she wasn't alone|on that train in 1942,
{21905}{21961}one year before the Liberation
{21969}{22038}- Albert, Danielle,|Junie, Suzy, Viviane -
{22055}{22112}just before the Gli?res maquis fell
{22121}{22233}despite the help Bresson's|youngest dame brought in a whisper.
{24966}{25038}And I am probably still alone...
{25043}{25145}in thinking that one of the visitors|on that night in '42,
{25150}{25225}that Gilles|- no, not the one in Drieu -
{25230}{25272}goes to visit Dominique
{25277}{25394}and asks: "So, do we or don't we|take this train?"
{25421}{25495}And that their hearts|thumped and thumped...
{28946}{29019}I was alone that night,|with my dreams.
{29024}{29115}Fifty years later,|we celebrate the Liberation.
{29128}{29217}Television,|because power has become spectacle,
{29230}{29281}is organizing a huge show.
{29291}{29334}No decoration for Guy Debord.
{29366}{29468}French cinema never shook off|the Germans or Americans,
{29490}{29609}so no one will be there to film|Claude Roy, who is seizing the CNC
{29642}{29700}that citadel built by Vichy.
{29733}{29816}The waves reconstituted|by Japanese cameras
{29826}{29905}will again forget to bury the dead...
{29921}{29949}as the poet did.
{30656}{30708}Poetry is resistance.
{30714}{30770}Ossip Mandelstam knew this.
{30778}{30851}But these days,|everyone ignores Russians.
{30861}{30983}Why is it that from '40 to '45|there was no resistance cinema?
{31004}{31116}There were resistance films.|Left and right, here and there,
{31126}{31193}but the only film,|in the true sense,
{31198}{31270}to resist America's occupation|of cinema
{31275}{31341}and a uniform way of making films
{31351}{31393}was an Italian film.
{31402}{31435}It is not by chance.
{31449}{31502}Italy fought the least.
{31517}{31591}It suffered greatly.|But having betrayed twice,
{31596}{31659}it suffered|to have lost its identity.
{31672}{31735}<i>It found it|with Rome, Open City</i>
{31746}{31825}because the film was made|by men without uniform.
{31830}{31866}It was the only time.
{31871}{31984}The Russians made martyr films.|The Americans made commercials.
{31991}{32071}The English made|what they always make: Nothing.
{32076}{32119}The Germans had no cinema.
{32161}{32190}No more cinema.
{32233}{32299}<i>And the French made|Sylvia and the Ghost.</i>
{32327}{32449}<i>The Poles made two expiatory films,|The Passenger and The Last Step,</i>
{32454}{32506}<i>and a nostalgic film, Kanal.</i>
{32522}{32586}Then they welcomed Spielberg.
{32609}{32695}"Never again" became|"It's better than nothing".
{32737}{32831}<i>But w...
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