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Ends Thu, Jun 3

Virtual: THE STORY OF A THREE-DAY PASS

  • Dir. Melvin Van Peebles
  • France
  • 1967
  • 87 min.
  • NR
  • 4K DCP

In French and English with English subtitles

  • Subtitled
Virtual: THE STORY OF A THREE-DAY PASS
PRICE*: $10 ($8 members) | VIEWING WINDOW: 3 days
WATCH ON: Computer, tablet, smartphone, Chromecast, AirPlay (or use a HDMI cable to connect your computer or tablet with your TV)
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Melvin Van Peebles’s edgy, angsty, romantic first feature could never have been made in America. Unable to break into a segregated Hollywood, Van Peebles decamped to France, taught himself the language, and wrote a number of books in French, one of which, La Permission, would become his stylistically innovative feature debut.

Turner (Harry Baird), an African American soldier stationed in France, is granted a promotion and a three-day leave from base by his casually racist commanding officer and heads to Paris, where he finds whirlwind romance with a white woman (Nicole Berger) — but what happens to their love when his furlough is over?

Channeling the brash exuberance of the French New Wave, Van Peebles creates an exploration of the psychology of an interracial relationship as well as a commentary on France’s contradictory attitudes about race that is playful, sarcastic, and stingingly subversive by turns, and that laid the foundation for the scorched-earth cinematic revolution he would unleash just a few years later with SWEET SWEETBACK’S BAADASSSSS SONG. (Janus Films)

New 4K restoration by IndieCollect in consultation with Mario Van Peebles, with support from the Hollywood Foreign Press Association.

“Looks starkly, intimately, and imaginatively at the double life of a Black soldier in the U.S. Army…. Reflects the stylistic variety and the freewheeling innovation of the French New Wave. It’s among the great American films of the sixties.” —Richard Brody, New Yorker

“We’re encouraged to see the world through Turner’s eyes and we experience the bigotry he faces in a very direct way. It was refreshingly straightforward and progressive stuff in 1967 that retains its power to shock and provoke audiences today.” —Kimberly Lindbergs, Cinebeats

 “Using jump cuts, freeze frames, photomontage and the conceit of interracial predation, THE STORY OF A THREE-DAY PASS contains the seeds of Van Peebles’s later pursuits….” —Garrett Chaffin-Quiray, Senses of Cinema

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