Screening Of Un Flic, Part Of Films On The Green 2016, On July 15

Screening Of Un Flic, Part Of Films On The Green 2016, On July 15

NEW YORK, June 29, 2016— On Friday, July 15, Films on the Green will present Un Flic (Dirty Money), director Jean-Pierre Melville’s final film and a masterpiece of film noir. It features Alain Delon as a Paris police chief (the cop, hence the title “un flic”) who gets involved in the seedy criminal underworld of Paris and a love triangle with his nightclub owner friend (Richard Crenna) and the “luminously vacant” (Time Out, Kenneth Turan) Cathy (Catherine Deneuve).

Lauded by critics for its sparse yet powerful dialogue and set, Un Flic is a commentary on the relationship between police and criminals, among much more. Wrought with heists, tension, and dark motives, the film is “mysterious and shiny as a black diamond” (Philippe Labro). It is at once a meditation on legal, moral, and sexual ambiguity—with the complex and tragic bond between Delon and Crenna—yet is also steeped in the tradition of American gangster films on the 1930s.

A rarely screened but crucial film in the history of French cinema, Un Flic is echoed in Godard’s Breathless and is also inscribed in French fashion history with costumes by Yves Saint Laurent (worn by Catherine Deneuve). The film captures the shadowy side of Paris and a corrupt facet of its underbelly—the City of Light gone dark.

The screening will take place on Friday, July 15th at 8:30pm at Riverside Park, Pier I. The film is in French with English subtitles and is free and open to all.

DJs from WHCS, Hunter College’s radio station, will play French tunes prior to the screening.

Friday, July 15 | 8:30 pm - Riverside Park, Pier I at 70th street

UN FLIC

Directed by Jean-Pierre Melville

with Alain Delon, Richard Crenna, Catherine Deneuve

1972 | Thriller | PG | 1h38 | France-Italy

In this film noir, director Jean-Pierre Melville’s final film, a Paris police chief (Alain Delon) discovers that his nightclub owner friend (Richard Crenna) also leads a group of bank robbers. When he’s tipped off that the same robbers are planning a drug heist, the police chief races to defeat his two-faced friend. Meanwhile, the police chief has engaged in some double-crossing himself – by sharing the same woman (Catherine Deneuve) with the man he calls his friend.

2016 Films on the Green Festival Schedule

The festival offers this year a striking portrait of the City of Lights, its urban landscape, and cultural diversity.A selection of classic, New Wave, and contemporary films will showcase the city’s aesthetic, cultural, and cinematic history from a dramatically unconventional angle through stories of love, romance, adolescence, female identity, and urban life in Paris and its surrounding suburbs.All films are shown with English subtitles. Screenings begin at 8:30pm, except the Columbia screening, which begins at 7:30pm.

June 7 – Central Park (79th street and Fifth Avenue): Breathless by Jean-Luc Godard, preceded with The Red Balloon by Albert LamorisseJune 10 – Washington Square Park: The Tall Blond Man with One Black Shoe by Yves RobertJune 17 – Washington Square Park: Air of Paris by Marcel CarnéJune 24 – Transmitter Park (Greenpoint, Brooklyn): Subway by Luc BessonJuly 1 – Transmitter Park (Greenpoint, Brooklyn): The 400 Blows by François TruffautJuly 8 – Riverside Park, Pier I (at 70th Street): April and the Extraordinary World by Christian Desmares & Franck EkinciJuly 15 – Riverside Park, Pier I (at 70th Street): Un Flic by Jean-Pierre MelvilleJuly 22 – Tompkins Square Park: Cleo from 5 to 7 by Agnès VardaJuly 29 – Tompkins Square Park: Boyfriends and Girlfriends by Eric RohmerSept. 8 – Columbia University (at 116th St): Girlhood by Céline Sciamma

The Cultural Services of the French Embassy, FACE Foundation and the City of New York Parks & Recreation would like to thank Films on the Green’s 2016 official sponsors: Air France, BNP Paribas and TV5 Monde.

Tandem Paris-New York 2016 is a large-scale transatlantic cultural exchange between Paris and New York. From June through October 2016, cultural institutions in New York and Paris will present an extraordinary selection of events in a variety of cultural disciplines including music, dance, cinema, literature, theatre, the visual arts, language, gastronomy, and digital innovation from the partner city. Tandem Paris – New York 2016 is organized by the City of Paris and the French Institute, in partnership with the Cultural Services of the French Embassy in the United States and the Embassy of the United States of America in France, with the support of the City of New York.

About

The Cultural Services of the French Embassy promotes the best of French arts, literature, cinema, digital innovation, language, and higher education across the US. Based in New York City, Washington D.C., and eight other cities across the country, the Cultural Services brings artists, authors, intellectuals and innovators to cities nationwide. It also builds partnerships between French and American artists, institutions and universities on both sides of the Atlantic. In New York, through its bookshop Albertine, it fosters French American exchange around literature and the arts.

FACE Foundation is an American nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting French-American relations through innovative cultural and educational projects. In partnership with the Cultural Services of the French Embassy, FACE promotes artistic, literary and educational exchange and collaboration between creative professionals from both countries. With additional corporate, foundation, and individual support, FACE administers grant programs in the performing and visual arts, cinema, translation, and secondary and higher education, while providing financial sponsorship to French-American festivals and other cultural initiatives. FACE focuses on new and recent work of living artists and the promotion of bilingualism and the French language. FACE Foundation (French-American Cultural Exchange) is a 501(c)(3) organization chartered by the state of New York.

NYC Parks is the steward of approximately 29,000 acres of land — 14 percent of New York City — including more than 5,000 individual properties ranging from Coney Island Beach and Central Park to community gardens and Greenstreets. We operate more than 800 athletic fields and nearly 1,000 playgrounds, 550 tennis courts, 66 public pools, 48 recreational facilities, 17 nature centers, 13 golf courses, and 14 miles of beaches. We care for 1,200 monuments and 23 historic house museums. We look after 650,000 street trees, and two million more in parks. We are New York City’s principal providers of recreational and athletic facilities and programs. We are home to free concerts, world-class sports events, and cultural festivals.