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21.05.26, 20:30, Une Simple Histoire (1959)

Marcel Hanoun’s feature debut, Une Simple Histoire, follows the wanderings of a single mother and her daughter through Paris. In a desperate search for work and shelter, they move from one hotel to another, until a downward spiral of misfortune eventually leaves them on the streets. In an observational style that combines influences of neorealism with an almost spiritual minimalism shared with his contemporary Robert Bresson, Hanoun offers a melancholic portrait of a world in which individualism and exclusion prevail. Commissioned by television and working on a limited budget, the Tunisian-born filmmaker displays an aesthetic drive for innovation that manifests itself primarily in formal playfulness and the narrative use of sound within a flashback structure.

Although Hanoun’s films and the many texts he wrote garnered praise from filmmakers such as Jonas Mekas and Jean-Luc Godard, he never received the same attention as his contemporaries. His uncompromising stance, not only in making but also in distributing his films, drove him into obscurity. It is only in recent years that Hanoun has been recognised for his aesthetic iconoclasm, which helped pave the way for the French Nouvelle Vague, a movement that would ultimately overshadow him.

Marcel Hanoun, France, 68 mins, French spoken, English subtitles
i.c.w. Sabzian
Campus Bijloke
Cloquet
Godshuizenlaan 4
9000 Gent