Skip to Content
Film Desk Books
Shop
Stockists
About/Contact
0
0
Film Desk Books
Shop
Stockists
About/Contact
0
0
Shop
Stockists
About/Contact
Shop Diary of a Film by Jean Cocteau
cocteau.jpg Image 1 of
cocteau.jpg
cocteau.jpg

Diary of a Film by Jean Cocteau

$30.00

Published by Film Desk Books, 2022
Sewn bound hardcover
First printing of 2,000 copies
162 pages
8x6 inches

“I’m woken by unbearable pain and since I can’t sleep or pace back and forth, I relieve myself by taking this notebook and attempting to cry out my pain to the unknown friends who will read these lines. They exist. I know them without knowing them. I can just see them in the shadows.” —Jean Cocteau

Beginning on August 26, 1945, the day before shooting began, until June 1, 1946, the day after the film was first screened, Jean Cocteau kept a diary of the making of his masterpiece Beauty and the Beast. Throughout he details every stage of production, as he faces and surmounts numerous obstacles including severe problems with his health, and ultimately the great pleasures of camaraderie with his remarkable collaborators: Jean Marais, Henri Alekan, and Christian Bérard, amongst others.

New English translation by Nicholas Elliott.

“I wonder if these hard days might be the sweetest of my life. Full of friendship, affectionate arguments, laughter, and control over fleeting time.” —Jean Cocteau

Quantity:
Add To Cart

Published by Film Desk Books, 2022
Sewn bound hardcover
First printing of 2,000 copies
162 pages
8x6 inches

“I’m woken by unbearable pain and since I can’t sleep or pace back and forth, I relieve myself by taking this notebook and attempting to cry out my pain to the unknown friends who will read these lines. They exist. I know them without knowing them. I can just see them in the shadows.” —Jean Cocteau

Beginning on August 26, 1945, the day before shooting began, until June 1, 1946, the day after the film was first screened, Jean Cocteau kept a diary of the making of his masterpiece Beauty and the Beast. Throughout he details every stage of production, as he faces and surmounts numerous obstacles including severe problems with his health, and ultimately the great pleasures of camaraderie with his remarkable collaborators: Jean Marais, Henri Alekan, and Christian Bérard, amongst others.

New English translation by Nicholas Elliott.

“I wonder if these hard days might be the sweetest of my life. Full of friendship, affectionate arguments, laughter, and control over fleeting time.” —Jean Cocteau

An Impersonation of Angels: A Biography of Jean Cocteau by Frederick Brown (Hardcover First Edition)
An Impersonation of Angels: A Biography of Jean Cocteau by Frederick Brown (Hardcover First Edition)
$25.00
Past/Tense: The Cocteau Diaries by Jean Cocteau (Two Volumes—Hardcover First Editions)
Past/Tense: The Cocteau Diaries by Jean Cocteau (Two Volumes—Hardcover First Editions)
$40.00
Jean Cocteau. An Investigation Into His Films and Philosophy by René Gilson (Softcover)
Jean Cocteau. An Investigation Into His Films and Philosophy by René Gilson (Softcover)
$12.00
Thirteen Monologues by Jean Cocteau and George Feydeau (Hardcover first Edition)
Thirteen Monologues by Jean Cocteau and George Feydeau (Hardcover first Edition)
$40.00

Published by Film Desk Books, 2022
Sewn bound hardcover
First printing of 2,000 copies
162 pages
8x6 inches

“I’m woken by unbearable pain and since I can’t sleep or pace back and forth, I relieve myself by taking this notebook and attempting to cry out my pain to the unknown friends who will read these lines. They exist. I know them without knowing them. I can just see them in the shadows.” —Jean Cocteau

Beginning on August 26, 1945, the day before shooting began, until June 1, 1946, the day after the film was first screened, Jean Cocteau kept a diary of the making of his masterpiece Beauty and the Beast. Throughout he details every stage of production, as he faces and surmounts numerous obstacles including severe problems with his health, and ultimately the great pleasures of camaraderie with his remarkable collaborators: Jean Marais, Henri Alekan, and Christian Bérard, amongst others.

New English translation by Nicholas Elliott.

“I wonder if these hard days might be the sweetest of my life. Full of friendship, affectionate arguments, laughter, and control over fleeting time.” —Jean Cocteau

.

That Bowling Alley on the Tiber by Michelangelo Antonioni
That Bowling Alley on the Tiber by Michelangelo Antonioni
$30.00
markerledepays.jpg markerledepays.jpg markerledepays.jpg markerledepays.jpg
Le Dépays by Chris Marker
$45.00
Film Business by Lillian Ross
Film Business by Lillian Ross
$30.00
Facing Blackness by Ashley Clark
Facing Blackness by Ashley Clark
$15.00
filmasasubversiveart.jpg
Film as a Subversive Art by Amos Vogel
$44.00
Sold Out

Join our mailing list:

Thank you!