PLAYTIME

Sunday, December 7th at 1:00 p.m.
and Monday, December 8th at 7:00 p.m.
Free admission
All ESSENTIAL CINEMA films screen Sunday at 1:00 p.m. and Monday at 7:00 p.m., and admission is FREE!
See classic art films the way they were meant to be seen - on the big screen in glorious new 35 mm prints!
"My all-time favorite movie, this hilarious 1967 French comedy by actor-director Jacques Tati almost certainly has the most intricately designed mise en scene in all of cinema ... extraordinary." - Jonathan Rosenbaum, THE CHICAGO READER
French director Jacques Tati's acclaimed cinematic art reached its peak in the gargantuan achievement of his beloved film PLAYTIME, perhaps the most spectacularly constructed slapstick comedy of all time.
Marking the third appearance of Tati's Mr. Magoo-like character, Mr. Hulot, PLAYTIME takes as its subject modern technology and its sometimes disastrous and always hilarious effects on the people living within it.
As in most Tati films, a minimal plot (the parallel paths of Hulot and a group of American tourists), is held together by a seamless ballet of visual, aural, and conceptual gags. Tati constructed an enormous set, Tativille, rendering a high modern contemporary Paris decked in chrome, mirrors, and glass within which the surreal slapstick of PLAYTIME unfolds.
Filmed in 70mm Technicolor, with sound recorded on a seven-channel stereo, the film approaches the city from a bird's eye perspective showing the complex yet abstract machinations of people and their technologies, with each character linked to the other and the whole ensemble dependant on the giant grid of the modern city. Objects, people, and sounds vie for the viewer's attention and all exert equal fascination and comedic power in the circus of Tati's modern life. From the airport to the high rise to the nightclub, Hulot weaves in and out of view, leaving a trail of bumped heads, offended sensibilities and curious glances in his wake. Essential slapstick!
(Jacques Tati, 1967, France, in French with English subtitles, Not Rated)
Essential Cinema is sponsored by the The Arizona Commission on the Arts, The National Endowment for the Arts and The Arizona Opera.