Title: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: jimboecv on April 17, 2009, 11:31:47 AM I can't vouch for the story behind the film (below), but it's pretty crazy viewing non the less.
It's always fun until someone gets hurt and no one got hurt. [thumbsup] On an August morning in 1978, French filmmaker Claude Lelouch mounted a gyro-stabilized camera to the bumper of a Ferrari 275 GTB (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferrari_275 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferrari_275)) and had a friend, a professional Formula 1 racer, drive at breakneck speed through the heart of Paris early in the morning . The film was limited, for technical reasons, to ten minutes; the course was from Porte Dauphine, through the Louvre, to the Basilica of Sacre Coeur. No streets were closed, for Lelouch was unable to obtain a permit. The driver completed the course in about nine minutes, reaching nearly 140 MPH in some stretches. The footage reveals him running real red lights, nearly hitting real pedestrians, and driving the wrong way up real one-way streets. Upon showing the film in public for the first time, Lelouch was arrested. He has never revealed the identity of the driver, and the film went underground. If you haven't seen this before it is a classic, if you have seen it I apologize, but it's still a classic. Turn on your sound and enjoy. www.youtube.com/watch?v=VqHrCLt3Geo (http://) Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: Speeddog on April 17, 2009, 11:55:02 AM OMG, that's a blast from the past! [thumbsup]
Good stuff, Thanks. Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: Spidey on April 17, 2009, 12:42:23 PM That was f'n awesome, jimbo. Now I'm sittin' at work with a 12 foot stiffy. [thumbsup] [moto]
Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: jimboecv on April 17, 2009, 03:22:19 PM That's criminally insane, reckless homicide. But, nobody got hurt, so it's OK! In fricken Paris! I love it!
Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: Speeddog on April 17, 2009, 05:55:39 PM That story sounds quite like what I heard back in 1990 or so.
The sound is just awesome. 8) Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: Le Piou on April 17, 2009, 06:38:55 PM We all drive/ride like that in Paris...
And just to get that striaght: the other cars... Well... Those guy are actually American tourists... [cheeky] ;D Edit: :o It's insane. - Around 3:30 after he enters in Le Louvre, the way he get out (at 3:38-3:40) is a very tiny hole into the wall!!!! Seriously a Hummer H2 would not pass through! Plus the exit is a total blind spot. You can't see what coming form the right (nothing can come from the left though it has always been a one way street) - In montmartre (Amelie Poulain, you remember?) around 7:40 to the end... It is pavment!!! not asphalt!!!!!!!!!!!!! :o :o :o :o Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: R2 on April 17, 2009, 06:54:04 PM That's insane!
Thanks for posting, never seen or heard of it before. Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: smducman on April 17, 2009, 10:07:34 PM thanks for sharing , fast and furious in Paris , wow...
Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: gojira on April 17, 2009, 10:07:57 PM A much better city tour than those tour buses! ;D Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: Holden on April 17, 2009, 10:24:03 PM http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0169173/ (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0169173/)
Filmed with a 6,9l Mercedes 450 SEL. Sound dub is... a little optimistic [laugh] Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: Desmostro on April 18, 2009, 08:02:30 AM love it. Ya I was going to say the sound is way better than the first time I saw it. [thumbsup]
Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: Michael Moore on April 21, 2009, 07:08:16 AM Incredible! I'd never seen that before. And the sound! Can I have a Ferrari now?
There must be something about Paris traffic that induces people to try and get through town quickly: Bike Getaway in Paris (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xy0Je1yM3Bc#hq) Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: hypurone on April 21, 2009, 08:55:30 AM Ahhh, warms the soul!! And was most likely the inspiration for the Ghost Rider shenanigans....
Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: jimboecv on April 21, 2009, 10:24:26 AM What else can you say? That was nuts.
Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: Holden on April 21, 2009, 11:30:33 AM What else can you say? That was nuts. Try watching it with the cheesy engine and tire sound off. He's barely cruising through town, slowly passing busses, turning very gently... The worst part is from 5:45–5:55 (went a little overboard with the tire squeal on the cobblestones) and the obvious seam at 6:03. The other speed illusion comes from the extremely low camera mount. Don't get me wrong—it's a classic, but they use this video in school to demonstrate how sounds can be deceiving. Another thing people do is find the exact route he took with a map, find the distance & calculate the average speed. If you want to see a classic French short that is truly nuts (though there are some dishonest sounds, they are easy to spot (e.g. the helicopter & paper)): Climb Dance (High Quality) (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J-K1B4sTX4o&fmt=18#lq-hq-vhq) Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: Le Piou on April 21, 2009, 06:10:50 PM [popcorn]
405 Turbo 16 GR. [bow_down] This thread is awesome!!!!! MOOOOOOORE!!!!! Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: Michael Moore on April 21, 2009, 07:39:14 PM Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: Speeddog on April 21, 2009, 09:09:34 PM Huh? What? I'm innocent, I say... Who you kiddin'? I saw that scooter vid. ;D Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: BikerGoddess on April 21, 2009, 10:20:45 PM I've seen this one many times before and it never gets old! One backstory I've heard is that Lelouche actually put the camera on the bumper of his Mercedes and over-dubbed the Ferrari sound effects.
Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: Holden on April 21, 2009, 10:29:15 PM I've seen this one many times before and it never gets old! One backstory I've heard is that Lelouche actually put the camera on the bumper of his Mercedes and over-dubbed the Ferrari sound effects. Where'd you hear a thing like that? :P Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: Raux on April 22, 2009, 02:30:29 AM (http://www.axe-net.be/rdv/images/rendezvous-lelouch.jpg)
clearly his Merc http://www.axe-net.be/rdv/presentation.php (http://www.axe-net.be/rdv/presentation.php) Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: BikerGoddess on April 22, 2009, 04:16:09 PM (http://www.axe-net.be/rdv/images/rendezvous-lelouch.jpg) clearly his Merc http://www.axe-net.be/rdv/presentation.php (http://www.axe-net.be/rdv/presentation.php) Validation is so sweet! I've never seen that pic before--thanks for finding it. Title: Re: A short film; Rendezvous in Paris. Turn it up to 11. Post by: Speeddog on April 22, 2009, 05:38:43 PM Babelfish, sorry for the length....:
(I particularly like how it came up with "roasting red lights" [laugh]) " C' was an Appointment " , short film carried out in 1976 in sequence shot by Claude Lelouch, appears to cause very many interrogations following the diffusion growing of film on the Net, that some d' between you discover and that d' others redécouvrent with pleasure… > > Who was at the wheel? > > Of which mark was the car? > > Were the streets blocked? … All in all, how was prepared and under which conditions this film has t' it been able to be carried out… So many questions, If can of answers, C' is why j' thus decided to offer this mini site to you, & d' there to clear up the mystery. Information which follows was checked near the organizations turning around Claude Lelouch & diffused on March 20, 2006 on its official site. But with the fact? Before starting… Point out me? Who has known as Alpine? It is true that the noise is not common to Mercedes… & Pourtant it is well at the wheel of its Mercedes that lelouch at summer carried out this short film. photograph with the support;) it was one return One can thus distinguish clearly there the technician of lelouch occupied fixing the camera on the cap before Mercedes. What thus proves that the band its beautiful & was indeed added thereafter to the videotape to pack the noise of Mercedes! Take the trouble of reading now the maintenance with Claude Lelouch below. This one at summer carried out by Yves Alion and Jean Ollé-Laprune for their book “Claude Lelouch, directions for use”. They tell there of exclusiveness all the details technique, & objectives of Lelouch in the realization of this short film. (text drawn from the official site of Claude Lelouch.) In which circumstances you did undertake “It was an appointment "? I had just completed the turning of “If were to be remade”. When a film finishes, one carries out “returned”. I thus asked my manager which measuring of film it remained us. After inventory, we did not have falls badly, between 3000 and 4000 meters on the whole. Many small rollers of 30 or 50 meters, but also a store of 300 meters, which it was envisaged to return. Me, I wanted to make a short film which we would have placed in first part of film. For a long time I wanted to tell the history of a late type with one return which makes full with infringements to arrive per hour. For me, being per hour is an obsession. I am able to take amazing risks not to be late. I suggested with my operator Jacques Lefrançois, the idea of a sequence shot, the camera accompanying a type which has appointment with Montmartre with a girl. As it is with flock, it crosses Paris to any pace, by roasting the stops and red lights. In does film, the driver take the most direct way? If Parisian wants to go from the Foch avenue to Montmartre, it is not obliged to pass by the counters of Louvre… It will take the avenue of Wagram, of course. But, Mous doubt to you it, I wanted to propose a kind of report at the same time. My problem was to work out a plan which does not exceed ten minutes and which finds its interest at the any end with the girl who arrives on the steps. I thought of the project. I asked Elie Chouraqui, my assistant at the time, to see which authorizations it would be necessary for us to obtain. We quickly realized that a plan as this one required to block any Paris. It was not the sorrow to even require we were not ready to implement the means of a feature-length film to carry out a court. I questioned a stuntman: “If I film very early, what I do risk by roasting red lights? ” He explained me that it was of two things one. While arriving at a red light, if there is nobody in the field of view, the risk is not quite great to pass in force: it would be necessary that for the same moment, the same nut déboule at the same speed. And if there is somebody in the field of view, it is always possible to slow down. I thus left the postulate that if I roll quickly and that I do not see anything, it is that there is nothing… the only disadvantage major they were the counters of Louvre. They frightened me because of their absence of visibility. For turning, I asked Chouraqui to settle with a walkie-talkie and to prevent me there at the time when I arrived. If he did not say anything to me, it is that all was well. It is the only true precaution which I took. For the beauty of film, it was necessary really that I do not stop. That I stop with a red light, and the film disappeared. There were nine chances besides out of ten so that we do not arrive at the end. The camera is fixed at the grill of Mercedes. How the car was equipped? We hung the camera on the bumper of the car, one 6,9 Mercedes liters. Inside we were three, attached like mules: myself at the wheel, my machino boss, and my operator boss for if required changing the diaphragm. For the last moment, it was necessary to regulate a slide means. The image was to be with the short-nap cloth of the ground to be even more spectacular. We are in full August. Of course, we had decided to sacrifice film and all to stop with the first danger. We rolled really quickly. When you known as “We rolled quickly” you speak which speed? Rise of the Foch avenue, between 150 and 180 km/h. Fields-Élysées with 130 to 150 with a point to 160 km/h on the level of Franklin Roosevelt. Then until the Harmony, as it was well released, I had to go up to 200 km/h. I took the place of the Harmony with 150. On the quays, I crossed 200 km/h. I took the counters almost normally, i.e. to 80 or 90 km/h. As Chouraqui did not call me, I passed under the counters at bottom, 100 km/h, because the passage is rather narrow all the same. I did not know that the talkie of Chouraqui was broken down! I knew it only finished turning. Then I went up the avenue of the Opera. The crossroads was blocked by a bus. To avoid slowing down, I had to pass on other side of the roadway, of the cars coming in opposite direction. Place of I' Opéra, not problem! I then took the street of Roadway-in Antin towards Clichy. I fell on truck-dustbins which I could exceed only while going up on the pavement. I believed more not to have problems. But while arriving street Lepic, I was blocked by a type which delivered. I took other side, towards paumant Palace, in destruction at the time. I went up the Rocquencourt avenue, which lengthened me enormously. I did not know if it were going to sufficient remain me film. I thus took streets in one way to arrive at Montmartre in times… You had carried out locations? I had made the course once, slowly, for determining the passages well. I had the equivalent of 9-10 minutes of film! There remained to me 15 seconds to cut the engine to get out of car and to take the girl in my arms. We had agreed that when I would hoot it would assemble two steps, thus penetrating in the field. The sequence shot could be succeeded only over these last seconds. I had said myself that if I did not make a success of the first catch, I would not start again. By superstition. If the miracle were to take place, it would take place… And it took place. By forcing nevertheless the destiny, since we roasted eighteen red lights. How you explain the notoriety of this short film, which became a film worship, which is more than rare fear a short film… I showed film a little everywhere. It very well was not always accomodated taking into account its lack of obvious civic direction, which I could not dispute. But it also has its faded. When I showed film for the first time at Los Angeles, where the non-observance of the codes of conduct is always strongly sanctioned, the triumph mingled with incredible whistles. “It was an appointment " always caused the polemic, but it shows also all that one likes in the cinema. As I like the cinema more than the law… I knew that I held a purple passage. I thought, in all modesty, that there was the possibility of doing one of the most beautiful plans of the history of the cinema. The ten minute old sequence shots are rare, because of the narrowness of the store of the camera. Even Hitchcock in “the Cord” anticipated its changes of film. You took again this principle of races in various forms. In “a man and a woman: twenty years already”, but it was on a circuit, just like in “Leaving To return”. For “the Cat and the Mouse”, carried out some time earlier, we had tried out the thing. But turning was concreted with cops in front of and behind. For “It was an appointment ", we made a trick of hooligan. What did you risk? Initially, an accident! Then, consequences of a turning without authorization. Finally a withdrawal of driving licence. The film is beautiful by its taking risk. If it had as much success and that it lends so much to discussion, it is that it is risky. You like the short films? In a certain way, it is more difficult to make a court than a length. Economically it is a nightmare. Artistically, it is necessary to be in essence. When a short film is looked at, it is known immediately if its signatory has future in the cinema. When I saw the short film of Xavier Giannoli for example, I knew that it was about a true director. |