After Mikhail Bakunin's death, the anarchist movement in France gradually organized itself within certain groups, particularly the Fédération communiste anarchiste.[1] Initially, anarchists were opposed to the arrival of cinema, much like conservativeCatholics and their Bonne Presse.[2] They argued, for instance, that the proletariat was poorly represented in films[1] and that cinema could also serve as a tool to stupefy the masses.[3] Both the anarchists and the conservative Catholics[4] quickly came to embrace film production and distribution, concluding that this new invention was a highly effective way to share their ideas.[1]
Anarchists were particularly uneasy with the fact that the majority of film productions seemed to convey the values and ideology of capitalism.[1] In September 1913, shortly before the cooperative’s founding, Yves Bidamant, its future main organizer, criticized traditional cinema in Le Libertaire, condemning the "Nick Carter, Fantômas, and other serialized products shown nightly in suburban cinemas".[1] In this article, he emphasized the need to establish an organization capable of producing anarchist films and creating anarchist cinema.[5] In reality, the group had already begun forming earlier that summer and was reportedly announced in August of the same year.[6][page needed] Additionally, many revolutionary syndicalists—a movement closely aligned with anarchism—showed interest in the project and supported it, joining forces with the anarchists, who made up the majority of the group.[7]
History
Yves Bidamant and Robert Guérard, a well-known anarchist songwriter from the 1890s–1900s,[1] officially founded the cooperative on 28 October 1913.[1] It was funded by 40 equal shares of 25 francs for a total of 1,000 francs.[1] Among the anarchists who subscribed were Yves Bidamant, Robert Guérard, Paul Benoist, Gustave Cauvin, Félix Chevalier, Henriette Tilly, and Charles-Ange Laisant. Other prominent anarchists also joined the project, including Lucien Descaves,[8]Jean Grave, Pierre Martin, and Sébastien Faure.[9]
1. The production, reproduction, sale, and rental of cinematographic films, as well as all related equipment and accessories;
2. Propaganda and education through artistic and theatrical performances, lectures, etc. ...
The Society will strive to elevate the intellectual level of the people. It will remain in constant ideological alignment with various proletarian groups based on the class struggle, aiming for the abolition of wage labor through economic and social transformation.
The organization produced a number of films and achieved some success.[1] Among the actresses involved in their productions were Lina Clamour and Marion Desclos, while actors included figures such as Fred Michelet.[10]Armand Guerra handled the photography for their first film, while Raphaël Clamour both acted in and directed it.[1]
From October to May, the cooperative produced 4,895 meters of film.[1] The films produced were as follows :[1][11]
Les Misères de l'aiguille (Miseries of the Needle), 18 January 1914
Les Obsèques du citoyen Francis de Pressensé (The Funeral of Citizen Francis de Pressensé), 31 January 1914
Victime des exploiteurs (Victim of the Exploiters), 28 March 1914, Palais des Fêtes, Rue Saint-Martin, large hall with 2,500 seats; a study on labor
L'Hiver ! Plaisirs de riches ! Souffrances des pauvres ! (Winter, Pleasures for the Rich, Sufferings for the Poor!), 31 January 1914
La Commune ! Du 18 au 28 mars 1871 (The Commune! From 18 to 28 March 1871), 28 March 1914, Palais des Fêtes
Le Vieux docker (The Old Docker), 28 March 1914
In May 1914, the organization increased its capital to 30,000 francs, divided into 600 shares of 50 francs each.[1] The organization had to close with the onset of World War I and the general mobilization in France.[1]
Legacy
The films produced by the cooperative were forgotten and ignored by many art and film historians.[8] They were rediscovered later through more recent research.[8]Philippe Esnault, in particular, is said to have tried to write about them, but his completed manuscript was ultimately stolen.[12] The organization is generally considered the first left-wing activist group to engage in film production.[13][page needed]
Their first film, Les Misères de l'aiguille (Miseries of the Needle), is likely the first feminist film in the world.[14] It explicitly addresses the condition of female workers, making it its central theme.[13][page needed] The cooperative also produced another film on the condition of women, as well as the first film dedicated to the Paris Commune.[7] It had a significant impact on the political consciousness of France at the time.[15]
^Le Libertaire (in French), 20 September 1913, retrieved 21 December 2024
^Luiz Felipe Cezar Mundim, « Le public organisé pour la lutte : le cinéma du peuple en France et la résistance du mouvement ouvrier au cinéma commercial (1895-1914) », (thèse), Université Panthéon-Sorbonne - Paris I ; Universidade federal do Rio de Janeiro, 22 août 2016, p. 15-22
https://theses.hal.science/tel-01820619v1/document
^Perron, Tangui (1995). ""Le contrepoison est entre vos mains, camarades" C.G.T. et cinéma au début du siècle". Le Mouvement social (in French) (172): 21–37. doi:10.2307/3778988. ISSN0027-2671. JSTOR3778988.
^Carou, Alain (1 September 2011). "Philippe Esnault, historien du cinéma". 1895. Mille huit cent quatre-vingt-quinze. Revue de l'association française de recherche sur l'histoire du cinéma (in French) (64): 142–153. doi:10.4000/1895.4399. ISSN0769-0959. Archived from the original on 28 May 2024. Retrieved 21 December 2024.
^Mundim 2019, pp. 18–19: "O filme foi ... possivelmente um dos primeiros no mundo com intenção declarada de uma representação dos temas do feminismo ativista da sua época. / The film was likely one of the first in the world explicitly geared towards representing the themes of militant feminism."
Mannoni, Laurent (1995). "La Commune". In Bénoliel, Bernard (ed.). La persistance des images: tirages, sauvegardes et restaurations dans la collection films de la Cinémathèque Française (in French). Paris: Cinémathèque française. pp. 44–47. ISBN978-2-900596-17-3. OCLC799447677.