
Henri Colpi
(15 July 1921 – 14 January 2006) The Swiss-born Colpi studied at The Institute
for Advanced Cinematographic Studies, graduating in 1947. During the1950s he
worked as an editor, mainly working on short films with directors such as
Georges Franju and Agnès Varda. He was the sound editor on Alain Resnais’
landmark Holocaust documentary, Nuit et brouillard (Night and Fog, 1955),
contributing to that film’s powerful emotional impact with a carefully balanced
mix of commentary and music.
Colpi’s
collaboration with Alain Resnais on Hiroshima Mon Amour (1959) and Last Year At
Marienbad (1961) had a profound impact on the art of editing. By rearranging or
editing time, Colpi and Resnais instilled the present with a constant sense of
the past and future. On these films he pioneered the use of “flash-ins”: sudden
and unexpected images from within the characters’ minds. It was an audacious
approach that had a lasting influence on other filmmakers.
In 1960,
Colpi began his parallel career as a director with Une aussi longue absence
(The Long Absence), which won the Palme d’Or at Cannes in 1961. This poetic and
poignant movie, with a screenplay by Marguerite Duras, tells of a widow (Alida
Valli) who owns a cafe in a Paris suburb and meets a tramp (Georges Wilson),
who may, or may not, be her husband who had disappeared 15 years earlier in a
prison camp.
His
directorial career was then confined to television. The exceptions were Heureux
Qui Comme Ulysse (Happy He Who Like Ulysses, 1970), the moving tale of a
farmhand who escapes with his old horse to save it from being sold for
bullfights, and L’ile mysteriosa (The Mysterious Island of Captain Nemo,1973),
cheaply made in Spain, co-directed with Juan Antonio Bardem, and starring Omar
Sharif.
In 1982,
Colpi worked to help restore a lost 1920 film, L'Hirondelle et la Mesange (The
Swallow And the Titmouse). André Antoine had shot six hours of film for this
silent melodrama, set on two barges. However, Charles Pathé, the producer,
thought it too realistic and it was never released. Colpi spliced and cut the original
down to 79 minutes, the result being a fascinating look at a brilliant film
from a cinematic pioneer.
Colpi, who
died leaving no family, was also the author of two excellent books, Dèfense et
Illustration de la Musique de Film (1963) and Letters to a Young Editor (1996).
Films :

The Long Absence
Produced by : Alberto Barsanti,
Claude Jaeger
Jacques Nahum
Written by : Marguerite Duras,
Gérard Jarlot
Music by : Georges Delerue
Cinematography : Marcel Weiss
Edited by : Jasmine Chasney, Jacqueline
Meppiel
Distributed by : Commercial
Pictures
Release date : 17 May 1961
Running time : 85 minutes
Country : France
Language : French
To be continued...