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Jean Mitry
Jean Mitry
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Mitry on the cover of his book The Aesthetics and Psychology of the Cinema

Jean-René Pierre Goetgheluck Le Rouge Tillard des Acres de Presfontaines, whose pseudonym was Jean Mitry (French: [mitʁi]; 7 November 1904 – 18 January 1988), was a French film theorist, critic and filmmaker, a co-founder of France's first film society, and, in 1938, of the Cinémathèque Française.[1]

Work

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Goetgheluck le Rouge Rillard des Acres de Presfontaines was born in Soissons and was the first lecturer of film aesthetics in France. Mitry was one of the first intellectuals responsible for taking film studies out of the era of the film club and into that of the university.[2]

Mitry was one of few major film theorists who worked in film production himself. He edited Alexandre Astruc's short film Le Rideau Cramoisi (1953) and directed two films of his own, Pacific 231 (1949), set to Arthur Honegger's music, and Images pour Debussy (1952), set to the music of Claude Debussy.[1]

He died in La Garenne-Colombes in 1988.[1]

Selected filmography

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Works

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  • Introduction to film aesthetics (1960)
  • Dictionary of cinema (1963)
  • The Aesthetics and Psychology of the Cinema (1965)[4]
  • History of cinema, 5 volumes (1967–1980)
  • Experimental Cinema: History and perspectives (1974)
  • Semiotics and the Analysis of Film (new edition 2000)

References

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Sources

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  • Aitken, Ian (4 January 2013). The Concise Routledge Encyclopedia of the Documentary Film. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-51206-3. Retrieved 27 June 2025.
  • Andrew, J. Dudley (15 April 1976). The Major Film Theories: An Introduction. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-987844-4. Retrieved 27 June 2025.
  • Bluher, Dominique (2005). Le court métrage français de 1945 à 1968: De l'âge d'or aux contrebandiers (in French). Presses universitaires de Rennes. ISBN 978-2-7535-0061-7. Retrieved 27 June 2025.
  • Tazi, Mohamed Abderrahman; Dwyer, Kevin (25 November 2004). Beyond Casablanca: M. A. Tazi and the Adventure of Moroccan Cinema. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-21719-6. Retrieved 27 June 2025.
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
'''Jean Mitry''' (7 November 1904 – 18 January 1988) was a French film theorist, critic, historian, and filmmaker known for his pioneering contributions to film aesthetics and psychology, as well as his role in preserving and promoting cinema in France. Mitry was active in France's early ciné-club movement, taking over leadership of "La Tribune Libre du Cinéma" in 1925, and co-founded the Cinémathèque Française in 1936, helping to establish one of the world's most important film archives and cultural institutions. He served as a professor of cinema at the Institut des Hautes Études Cinématographiques (IDHEC), where he influenced generations of filmmakers and scholars, and later taught film studies at the University of Montreal. His major work, ''The Aesthetics and Psychology of the Cinema'', presents a comprehensive formalist and phenomenological approach to film art and remains a key text in film theory. Mitry also engaged in practical filmmaking as an editor and occasional director, bridging theory and practice in his career. Through his writings, teaching, and institutional efforts, he helped shape modern film scholarship and the appreciation of cinema as an art form.

Early life and entry into cinema

Birth and background

Jean Mitry was born Jean-René-Pierre Goetgheluck Le Rouge Tillard des Acres de Presfontaines on November 7, 1904, in Soissons, Aisne, France. He later adopted his best-known pseudonym, Jean Mitry, borrowed from the name of the commune Mitry-Mory, situated approximately 25 kilometers from Meaux. In his early professional activities, he worked as a photographer under the pseudonym Jean Letort. No detailed records exist of his family background or early education beyond these initial pursuits.

Early career and first film roles

Jean Mitry began his involvement in cinema in the early 1920s, starting as a photographer under the pseudonym Jean Letort. He contributed cinematography to several films during this period, including Geneviève (1923), Feu Mathias Pascal (1926), and Le Vertige (1926). He subsequently worked as an assistant director for key figures in French cinema, including Marcel L'Herbier in 1924, Abel Gance on the production of Napoléon (1927), Pierre Chenal, and Jean Epstein. Mitry also appeared in minor acting roles in some productions, such as in Abel Gance's Napoléon (1927) and Jean Renoir's La Nuit du Carrefour (1932). In 1929, he co-directed his first short film, the documentary Paris Cinéma, alongside Pierre Chenal. During the 1920s, Mitry also began contributing early film reviews and writings, marking the start of his engagement with film criticism and theory. His growing participation in ciné-club activities further deepened his commitment to the medium during these formative years.

Institutional contributions

Ciné-clubs and film societies

Jean Mitry was an active participant in the burgeoning ciné-club movement in France during the 1920s and 1930s, where film enthusiasts gathered to screen, discuss, and promote cinema as an art form. He became a prominent figure in this culture and belonged to several such groups, engaging in early film criticism and efforts to elevate the medium's status beyond mere entertainment. One notable involvement was with La Tribune libre du cinéma, founded by Fernand Léger in 1925, which Mitry soon took over with a few friends, assuming leadership to guide its activities. This club provided a platform for screenings and debates that contributed to the broader appreciation of film in France during the period. In 1935, Mitry co-founded Le Cercle du cinéma alongside Henri Langlois and Georges Franju, further advancing organized film appreciation and preservation efforts. This initiative laid groundwork for the later establishment of a formal archival institution.

Co-founding and role at the Cinémathèque Française

Jean Mitry co-founded the Cinémathèque Française in 1936 alongside Henri Langlois and Georges Franju, transforming their earlier film society efforts into a permanent institution dedicated to film preservation. The organization evolved from Le Cercle du Cinéma, which Mitry, Langlois, and Franju had established in 1935 as a platform for screenings and discussion, and the formal founding occurred in September 1936 with additional support from figures like P.-A. Harlé as president. As the first archivist of the Cinémathèque Française from 1936 to 1945, Mitry held primary responsibility for building and safeguarding the collection. He focused on acquiring film prints, organizing the archives, and implementing preservation practices to protect cinematic heritage during the institution's formative years, including the challenges of the wartime period. His archival work laid essential foundations for the Cinémathèque's growth into a major repository of film history through systematic collection and conservation efforts. Mitry's direct involvement with the Cinémathèque ended after World War II, around 1945–1947, after which he pursued other avenues in film education and scholarship.

Filmmaking career

Directing short and experimental films

Jean Mitry turned to directing short and experimental films after World War II, creating a body of work that emphasized visual rhythm, musical synchronization, and abstract cinematic expression. His breakthrough came with Pacific 231 (1949), a short film that interprets Arthur Honegger's symphonic poem through dynamic images of a steam locomotive, aligning mechanical movement with the score's accelerating rhythm. The film earned the Prix pour le montage (prize for best editing) in the short film category at the 1949 Cannes Film Festival. Mitry continued this music-driven experimental approach in Images pour Debussy (1951), which translates Claude Debussy's piano pieces—including "En bateau," "Arabesques," "Reflets dans l'eau," and "Arabesque en sol majeur"—into visual sequences that mirror the music's impressionistic structure and flow. These early shorts established his signature style, using precise editing to create audiovisual harmonies rather than narrative storytelling. Over the following decade, Mitry directed several other experimental shorts that explored mechanical, natural, and thematic subjects through innovative forms. Notable examples include Symphonie mécanique (1956), which examines industrial rhythms; Le Miracle des ailes (1956, co-directed with Georges Beuville); Écrire en images (1957); La Grande Foire (1961); and Les Héros de l’air (1963, co-directed with Roger Laurent). These works, often structured around rhythmic patterns or musical analogies, reflect his broader interest in cinema as a poetic and sensory medium.

Feature film and other production roles

Jean Mitry's only feature-length fiction film was the mystery comedy Énigme aux Folies-Bergère (also known as The Enigma of the Folies-Bergère), which he directed in 1959. This work marked his sole foray into directing a full-length feature, standing apart from his extensive output of short and experimental films. Beyond directing, Mitry frequently contributed to films in other key production roles, particularly editing and writing. He served as editor on Alexandre Astruc's acclaimed short Le Rideau cramoisi (The Crimson Curtain, 1952). Earlier in his career, he edited and wrote dialogue for Trois dans un moulin (1938). He also handled editing duties on several of his own short projects, including Pacific 231 (1949) and Images pour Debussy (1951), where his montage work supported the rhythmic and visual experimentation central to those pieces. Mitry additionally received writing credits separate from his directorial efforts. He provided the screenplay for Le Quatrième Sexe (The Fourth Sex, 1962). In his early years, Mitry held supporting production positions on several films, including assistant director work on Napoléon (1927), La Nuit du carrefour (1932), and Scandals of Clochemerle (1948), alongside minor acting appearances in Napoléon (1927) and La Nuit du carrefour (1932). He also served as cinematographer under the pseudonym Jean Letort on films such as Geneviève (1923) and Le Vertige (1926). These early contributions preceded his more prominent theoretical and institutional activities in cinema.

Academic career

Teaching positions and influence on film education

Jean Mitry held several pioneering teaching positions that helped establish film studies as a formal academic discipline in France and beyond. He joined the Institut des Hautes Études Cinématographiques (IDHEC) in 1944, where he occupied the chair of aesthetics while also lecturing on film history and theory, serving as one of the first lecturers in film aesthetics in France until 1966. This role at the leading French film school allowed him to shape professional training in cinema during the postwar era. In 1966, Mitry began teaching at the Université de Montréal with charges de cours, and in 1968 he was appointed to a new chair in the History and Aesthetics of Cinema, becoming the first professor of film studies at a Quebec university and possibly in Canada; he held this position until 1970. This appointment marked an important step in bringing film education into the university system in a francophone context. From 1969, Mitry took up teaching at the Université Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne (UER Arts et Archéologie), initially while still affiliated with Montreal, and continued there until 1976, with his status reduced to chargé de cours in the final two years due to age limits; he also supervised theses at Paris I until 1980. He briefly served as chargé d’enseignement at the École supérieure de journalisme de Paris and the Université Paris-Nord between 1972 and 1974. Mitry further supported film education by becoming the first president of the Cinémathèque universitaire, founded in 1973 at Paris I. Through these positions, he contributed significantly to elevating film studies from specialized institutions and cine-clubs to university-level programs in France and Quebec, although he lamented late in life that such academic recognition had arrived twenty years too late for him.

Theoretical and historical writings

Major theoretical publications

Jean Mitry's most significant theoretical contribution is his monumental two-volume work Esthétique et psychologie du cinéma, with the first volume Les structures published in 1963 and the second volume Les formes published in 1965. A single-volume reprint combining both parts appeared in 2001. In this work, Mitry sought to overcome the longstanding opposition between realist theories, such as those of André Bazin, and formative or formalist theories, such as those of Rudolf Arnheim and Sergei Eisenstein, by arguing that the film image is fundamentally dual in nature. He described the image as possessing an analogical dimension, where the spectator perceives the represented object in a manner similar to direct worldly perception, and an intentional dimension, where the framed and composed image carries the filmmaker's aesthetic and expressive intentions. Mitry further contended that cinematic signification operates primarily through connotation rather than denotation, asserting that every artistic expression in film results from connotative structuring that allows concrete representation to give rise to symbolic and abstract meaning in the spectator's imagination. This approach led him to value films where meaning emerges naturally from represented reality rather than through imposed symbolism or overly literal realism. An earlier theoretical text, Introduction à l'esthétique du cinéma, appeared in 1960 and laid groundwork for his aesthetic inquiries. In his later years, Mitry directly critiqued structuralist semiology in La Sémiologie en question: Langage et cinéma, published in 1987, where he argued that linguistic models have significant limits when applied to film and specifically examined the shortcomings in Christian Metz's semiological framework. These publications collectively reflect Mitry's phenomenological and psychological approach to film aesthetics, informed by his extensive teaching experience.

Historical works, monographs, and other books

Jean Mitry produced an extensive body of historical and reference works on cinema, complementing his theoretical contributions with detailed studies of filmmakers and comprehensive surveys of film history. Among his early monographs are focused studies on major directors, including John Ford (1954), which helped initiate the tradition of in-depth auteur monographs in France. He followed with S.M. Eisenstein (1956) and Charlot et la fabulation chaplinesque (1957), a study of Charlie Chaplin's narrative style, as well as René Clair (1960). Mitry also wrote on D.W. Griffith, Thomas H. Ince, and additional Chaplin compilations, such as Tout Chaplin, which presented complete works through text and images. In the realm of encyclopedic and bibliographic projects, Mitry compiled the Dictionnaire du cinéma in 1963, a reference dictionary published by Librairie Larousse that covered key terms, figures, and concepts in cinema. His most expansive bibliographic endeavor was the Filmographie universelle, a series of 35 volumes initiated in 1963 under the auspices of the Institut des Hautes Études Cinématographiques and continued partially until around 1988, cataloging films across various national schools and periods. Mitry's principal historical synthesis is the multi-volume Histoire du cinéma, published in five volumes between 1967 and 1980, which examined cinema as both an art form and an industry from its origins through the mid-20th century. He also addressed specialized topics in Le Cinéma expérimental: Histoire et perspectives (1974), providing a historical overview and analysis of experimental filmmaking trends.

Death and legacy

Later years and death

In his later years, Jean Mitry maintained his engagement with film research and education. He continued supervising doctoral theses until 1980, supporting emerging scholars in the field. From 1984 to 1988, he served as president of the Association française de recherche sur l'histoire du cinéma (AFRHC), an organization dedicated to advancing the historical study of cinema. Jean Mitry died on January 18, 1988, in La Garenne-Colombes, at the age of 83. Some sources indicate Paris as the place of death.

Influence on film studies

Jean Mitry's Esthétique et Psychologie du Cinéma (1963–1965) is widely recognized as a landmark that bookends the era of classical film theory, with Christian Metz's reviews of its volumes serving to mark the transition to subsequent paradigms. By synthesizing realist and formalist traditions while drawing on phenomenology, epistemology, and even quantum mechanics to reconcile subject-object relations in perception, Mitry produced a comprehensive aesthetic framework that bridged earlier theorists like Arnheim and Balázs with emerging semiological approaches. Mitry stands out among major film theorists for his extensive practical experience in filmmaking and editing, which closely informed his theoretical work; only Sergei Eisenstein is said to have devoted comparable time and energy to hands-on production. This dual engagement as practitioner and scholar lent his analyses a grounded perspective on editing, image status, and symbolic expression that distinguished him from purely critical or philosophical predecessors. Despite its ambition and scope, Mitry's work was quickly marginalized by the rise of structuralist semiology in the mid-1960s, whose systematic and scientific orientation rendered his proto-phenomenological and aesthetic concerns outmoded. Ideological critiques after 1968 further diminished its standing, and subsequent developments in psychoanalysis, cognitivism, identity politics, and post-theory caused it to largely vanish from dominant discourse in film studies. More recently, Mitry's ideas have seen renewed attention in film-philosophy and amid the digital turn, where revived interest in cinematic ontology, realism, and perception aligns with his efforts to transcend the realist-formative divide. His role in institutionalizing film education—through early university teaching and contributions to French film culture—helped establish film studies as an academic discipline, yet his legacy remains underrepresented in contemporary curricula. The absence of a complete English translation, along with significant expurgations of epistemological material in available editions, has contributed to his work being only partially known and often overlooked.

References

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