New 4K Restoration of Gilbert Adair’s THE DREAMERS to Receive UK Premiere at the British Film Institute

Image: Recorded Picture Company

We are delighted to announce that THE DREAMERS – the 2003 film adapted by the late Gilbert Adair from his own novel, and directed by Academy Award-winning Bernardo Bertolucci (THE LAST EMPEROR, LAST TANGO IN PARIS) – has been restored in sparkling 4K quality, and will receive its UK premiere next month at the BFI Southbank.

Tickets to the premiere on 27 February are available now on the BFI website (18:10, BFI Southbank). The screening will be followed by a Q&A with Bernardo and Gilbert’s collaborator, Recorded Pictures Company producer Jeremy Thomas. The film will also be re-released on 4K Ultra-HD Blu-Ray on 22 April 2024, and is available to pre-order now.

THE DREAMERS is an evocative, sensual and disarmingly nostalgic portrait of three young cinema lovers caught up in the political turmoil of 1968 Paris. Originally published as THE HOLY INNOCENTS in 1988, Gilbert simultaneously reworked the material for both the film script and a new version of the novel, retitled THE DREAMERS, which was published in the UK by Faber & Faber. The film, starring Eva Green (CASINO ROYALE), Louis Garrel (LITTLE WOMEN) and Michael Pitt (BOARDWALK EMPIRE) first premiered at the Venice Film Festival in 2003, winning rave reviews from the likes of Roger Ebert, Philip French and Peter Bradshaw.

THE DREAMERS was restored in 4K by Cinetica Bologna in collaboration with Recorded Picture Company, the production company behind the film. The technical work was done by L’Immagine Ritrovata laboratory from the original negatives, and had its world premiere as part of Il Cinema Ritrovato festival in July 2023, in Bologna’s Piazza Maggiore. The screening was introduced by producer Jeremy Thomas, with Academy Award-nominated director Luca Guadagnino (CALL ME BY YOUR NAME), and actress Marisa Paredes (LIFE IS BEAUTIFUL).

THE DREAMERS is set in Paris, Spring of 1968: the city is beginning to emerge from hibernation and an obscure spirit of social and political renewal is in the air. Yet Théo, his twin sister Isabelle and Matthew, an American student they have befriended, think only of immersing themselves in another, addictive form of hibernation: moviegoing at the Cinémathèque Française. Night after night, they take their place beside their fellow cinephiles in the very front row of the stalls and feast insatiably off the images that flicker across the vast white screen.

Denied their nightly 'fix' when the French government suddenly orders the Cinémathèque's closure, Théo, Isabelle and Matthew gradually withdraw into a hermetically sealed universe of their own creation, an airless universe of obsessive private games, ordeals, humiliations and sexual jousting which finds them shedding their clothes and their inhibitions with equal abandon. A vertiginous free fall interrupted only, and tragically, when the real world outside their shuttered apartment succeeds at last in encroaching on their delirium.

Image: Lin Leong

About Gilbert Adair

A cultural observer, journalist, broadcaster, critic, translator, screenwriter and award-winning novelist, Gilbert Adair wrote regular columns for The Sunday Times, Esquire, and Independent on Sunday. He died in 2011.

His books have been published on both sides of the Atlantic and translated into twenty languages. Amongst his finest achievements were his novels THE DREAMERS, which Gilbert adapted himself for the ‘extraordinarily beautiful’ (Roger Ebert) 2003 film directed by Bernardo Bertolucci, and LOVE AND DEATH ON LONG ISLAND (adapted for the screen by Richard Kwietnieowski in 1997, with John Hurt playing the leading role) as well as his translation of Georges Perec’s LA DISPARATION, published in English under the title A VOID and achieved, like the original text, without use of the letter ‘e’.

Praise for the film THE DREAMERS

‘Director Bernardo Bertolucci has simply given us his best picture for many years, working from an elegant, urbane screenplay by Gilbert Adair… Watching this film is like drinking a bottle of good red wine, all at once, on an empty stomach. Not good for you, but wickedly pleasurable all the same.’ – Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian

‘An evocative reminiscence of an era when cinema and politics could count for as much as carnal passion.’ – Time Out

‘A brilliant critic, pasticheur and aphorist, Adair is one of those Scots who have bypassed English metropolitan culture and have become very much at home in the French literary and intellectual tradition… Adair has now adapted his novel for the screen as THE DREAMERS, and as his novel is about politics, transgressive sex and the cinema itself, he has found a perfect collaborator in Bernardo Bertolucci… an amusing, sophisticated movie, true to its times, cheerfully erotic, and played with unselfconscious conviction by its three young actors.’ – Philip French, The Observer

‘Disarmingly sweet and completely enchanting.’ – A. O. Scott, The New York Times

‘A masterpiece’ – The Telegraph

‘Sexy and Provocative.’ – Dazed and Confused

‘He writes … as if he were making a thousand angels dance on the head of a pin.’ – Kevin Jackson, Independent on Sunday

GILBERT ADAIR 1944-2011

Adair, Gilbert - website.jpg

Gilbert Adair, award-winning novelist, film critic and essayist, scriptwriter and award-winning translator of Perec, died on Friday at the age of 66. Many tributes appeared in the press over the weekend.

Author of works such as The Evadne Mount Trilogy (an homage to Agatha Christie's novels), THE HOLY INNOCENTS, his first novel which was filmed by Bertolucci as THE DREAMERS) and translator of George Perec's 1969 novel written without the letter 'e', LA DISPARITION, which was published in English as A VOID. Peter Bradshaw in The Guardian remarks that this was a challenge Adair could not resist' and 'his single most gasp-inducingly clever achievement'.

In another tribute in The Daily Telegraph, Jake Kerridge notes that Adair's novels are 'witty, allusive, full of cultural jokes both high (Evadne's catchphrase is 'Great Scott Moncreff!) and low ('This time' said Evadne, 'it's personal')...the honesty with which Adair faces his own regrets and inadequacies makes this book extremely poignant as well as riotously entertaining.'

Mike Higgins, in The Independent, reflects that when Gilbert was the chief film critic of The Independent: 'As he pronounced upon, damned and just occasionally approved of the week's offerings, he did so in a voice that deprecated its owner's undeniable cinephile authority -  a ludic, knowing quality that extended beyond his writing on film.'

In his moving tribute to his close friend in The Observer, novelist Henry Porter observes that in the last year of his life, Gilbert discovered kindness and compassion:

 'Gilbert was an extraordinarily fastidious and cerebral person, who veered towards scepticism and a wry suspicion that life always disappointed in the end. Yet this discovery that kindness was the rule rather than the exception in the scores of people who treated and helped him over the year was a revelation...He will be missed greatly by his admirers and friends for his unique intelligence, talent and delightful company. He leaves a void, in more ways than one.'

Blake Friedmann were proud to represent his books and scriptwriting for the past 29 years, beginning with his extraordinary 'Alice' novel, ALICE THROUGH THE NEEDLE'S EYE, the first-ever 'Alice' pastiche Macmillan ever published, even though, as the original publishers of the Lewis Carroll books, they were offered many.  

A few press comments on his novels:

'As a writer, Gilbert Adair is something of a polymath who defies categories ... as you surrender to Adair's narrative conjuring  tricks, the novel reveals itself to be a witty and thoroughly engaging Chinese  puzzle of a book that confirms him as one of the most inventive writers working today.' - Attitude Magazine

'I read this book in a constant state of admiration: smiling, chuckling and often laughing out loud.'-- Philip French, The Observer

'This is a delicious confection; an expert pastiche full of clever jokes and a gripping murder mystery. Adair provides a perfect tribute to Christie in every respect save one: it is far too well written.'-- Michael Andritti, London Lite

'The English author Gilbert Adair is a vocal imitator of the first order, who parodies and even surpasses his role models. But he doesn't  show  them up, he just takes a bow … For Adair, the fact that literature almost invariably alludes to literature is the origin of an exhaustless lust to play with parody and irony … Gilbert Adair is an intimate connoisseur of literature and an extremely clever craftsman. He combines ingenuity, wit and precision.' -- Die Zeit

'Diabolically clever and insidiously gripping, a darker, self-referential version of Peter Shaffer's SLEUTH.  A fast, compelling read with a stunning but perfectly logical final twist.'  -- Michael Dibdin

'The Holy Innocents is an art documentary of a state of mind, a libido in revolt at a period in Paris that none who were there have ever escaped in their insight and dreams.' -- Andrew Sinclair, The Times

'A very funny portrait of an extraordinarily unworldly academic's introduction to the dizzyingly incomprehensible realm of popular culture.' -- Nick Hornby,

And on MYTHS AND MEMORIES:

'A book that we need, and have needed for some time.  A witty French sensibility has been brought by an Englishman to an examination of English manners and morals as they are now ...  he has given us a brisk survey of ourselves, both piquant and riveting.  This is a book not to be missed.'  -- Anthony Burgess

On his Perec translation:

'The translator's dazzling feat of re-creation conveys the author's near-magical cleverness while preserving an underlying seriousness that makes the book much more than a mere curiosity.' -- The New Yorker

'Adair's energy and ingenuity are almost bottomless … The novel's flippancy of tone, fluctuations of register, and eerie precision have all been maintained, along with the excess and the exuberance.' -- Times Literary Supplement

'Gilbert Adair has now shown quite brilliantly that a lipogrammatic text in one language can be more than adequately done in another, retaining not only the alphabetical constraint but much of the virtuosity of the original.' -- London Review of Books

'It needed a madman or a genius to want to translate this accursed book into English. In Gilbert Adair it has found both. '-- The Guardian

A full list of his publications is:

HOLLYWOOD'S VIETNAM: Proteus 1981
ALICE THROUGH THE NEEDLE'S EYE: Faber 1984
MYTHS AND MEMORIES: Collins 1986
PETER PAN AND THE ONLY CHILDREN: Macmillan 1987
THE HOLY INNOCENTS: Heinemann 1988 (republished as THE DREAMERS, Faber 2004)
LOVE AND DEATH ON LONG ISLAND: Heinemann 1990
THE DEATH OF THE AUTHOR: Heinemann 1992    
THE POSTMODERNIST ALWAYS RINGS TWICE: Fourth Estate 1992
FLICKERS: A History of the Cinema in 100 Images: Faber 1995
THE KEY OF THE TOWER: Secker 1997
SURFING THE ZEITGEIST: Faber 1997
A CLOSED BOOK: Faber 1999
THE REAL TADZIO: Short Books 2001
BUENAS NOCHES BUENOS AIRES: Faber 2004    
THE ACT OF ROGER MURGATROYD: Faber 2006    
A MYSTERIOUS AFFAIR OF STYLE: or Evadne Mount Rides Again: Faber 2007
AND THEN THERE WAS NO ONE: Faber 2009

Please click on the following links to read more tributes to Gilbert Adair.

http://mubi.com/notebook/posts/gilbert-adair-1944-2011

http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2011/dec/09/gilbert-adair-dies

http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2011/dec/09/gilbert-adair

http://mhpbooks.com/45414/hail-farewell-gilbert-adair/

 

Blake Friedmann is extremely sad to announce that our client of 29 years, Gilbert Adair, died this morning.

Adair, Gilbert - website.jpg

Blake Friedmann is extremely sad to announce that our client of 29 years, Gilbert Adair, died this morning. To read more, please click on the following links:

http://mubi.com/notebook/posts/gilbert-adair-1944-2011

http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2011/dec/09/gilbert-adair-dies

http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/filmblog/2011/dec/09/gilbert-adair-man-letters-cinema?newsfeed=true