Bravo to all those of you who replied the "fête de la fédération" of 1790. Though if you thought of the storming of the Bastille a year earlier, you'd be correct anyway: this feast was in itself a commemoration.
Two years ago TF1 vidéo released a French DVD of a 1989 film depicting these events. Unfortunately, an American release is still to come even though the cast was international.


Today, I'm not so much discussing a lost film (although it IS still unreleased on home video), but rather lost monuments on film, and how to achieve that.
In this movie, many monuments of Paris are seen, but you could hardly find them if you tried. The palace of the Tuileries, burnt and destroyed in the late 19th century, was were the royal family took refuge after they left Versailles; the prison of the Temple where they were held, was destroyed by Napoleon to avoid a pilgrimage of royalists. The town hall which shares its emplacement with the current building was replaced in 1874 by a new one with a different style. Last but not least is the famous Bastille, a Royal prison whose neighborhood has kept its name.
So how is that possible? 3D animation? In 1989, don't make me laugh. To each problem a solution, to each monument its representation. Thus if the facade of the Place of the Tuileries resembles that of the castle of Fontainebleau, that's because it IS Fontainebleau.
The menacing tower of the Temple, is sometimes shown as what very much looks like a painting on glass, and other times as the dungeon of Vincennes which is still there. The booklet of the French DVD tells us that the top of the tower was built as a model, like the town hall .

![]() |
The Bastille |
This castle was ideal to stand for the Bastille: other than the fact that it resembles it, the castle is extraordinarily well preserved, located between a big lot where the sets of Parisian houses could be build and the Rhone river that could stand for the Seine. Should you be lucky enough one day to visit it, I suggest you see the Beaucaire castle facing it on the other side of the river.


That's all for today folks!
0 comments:
Post a Comment