The Gleaners and I

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The Gleaners and I
("Les Glaneurs et la glaneuse")
Directed by Agnès Varda
Written by Agnès Varda
Starring Bodan Litnanski, François Wertheimer, others
Release date(s) 2000 (France)
Running time 82 mins
Language French, English
Budget N/A
IMDb profile

The Gleaners and I is a French documentary by Agnès Varda on the life of French gleaners who search the newly-harvested French fields for any crop that might be left. It was released as Les Glaneurs et la glaneuse in France in 2000.

[edit] The Subjects

The film tracks a series of gleaners as they hunt for food, knicknacks, and personal connection. Varda travels French countryside and city to find and film not only field gleaners, but also urban gleaners and those connected to gleaners, including a wealthy restaurant owner whose ancestors were gleaners. The film spends time capturing the many aspects of gleaning and the many people who glean to survive. It touches on things such a the teacher named Alain who is an urban gleaner who has a master degree. He teach's immagrants. Varda's other subjects include artists who incorporate recycled materials into their work, symbols she discovers during her filming (including a clock without hands and a heart-shaped potato), and the French law regarding gleaning.

[edit] Technique

The film is notable for its use of a hand-held camera and for unusual camera angles and techniques. As one example, Varda includes footage shot when she forgets to turn off her camera and it drops to her side (her "The Dance of the Lens Cap").

In The Gleaners and I, Varda films herself combing her hair, and there are many visuals of her hands. She frequently "catches" trucks on the freeway, placing her hand in front of the camera in the ASL sign for "o", with the truck in the center of her hand, then closing in on them as she drives past them.

Much of this footage is woven into the film to show that Varda, as a film maker, is also a gleaner. This concept is made explicit in the French title, Les Glaneurs et la glaneuse, which could be translated as "the gleaners and the gleaneress".

[edit] External links

In other languages