Meeting the Man: James Baldwin in Paris

Terence Dixon
Part of

58th New York Film Festival

September 17 - October 11, 2020

This rare film document of one of the towering figures of 20th-century American literature—photographed by Jack Hazan (Rude Boy, A Bigger Splash)—captures the iconic writer in several symbolic locations, including the Place de la Bastille.

DIRECTOR
Terence Dixon
YEAR
1971
COUNTRY
UK / France
RUNTIME
27 minutes

Screening with Muhammad Ali, the Greatest

This rare film document of one of the towering figures of 20th-century American literature—photographed by Jack Hazan (Rude BoyA Bigger Splash)—captures the iconic writer in several symbolic locations, including the Place de la Bastille. As Hazan recounts: “Things don’t go to plan for him and the film crew when a couple of young Black Vietnam draft dodgers impose themselves on the American. Baldwin wrestles with being a role model to the Black youths, denouncing Western colonialism and crimes against African Americans while at the same time demonstrating his mastery and understanding of the culture he supposedly despises.” An NYFF58 Revivals selection. Restored from a 2K scan of the 16mm original color negative A&B rolls and the 16mm optical negative. Scanning services by UPP, Prague. Picture and audio restoration, grading, and mastering by Mark Rance, Watchmaker Films, London. The film is presented in 1.37:1.

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