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$25.00
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Purchase a tote bag featuring the photograph "Film homage The Four Hundred Blows 1959 Tucson Arizona 1970-2009" by David Lee Guss. Our tote bags are made from soft, durable, poly-poplin fabric and include a 1" black strap for easy carrying on your shoulder. All seams are double-stitched for added durability. Each tote bag is machine-washable in cold water and is printed on both sides using the same image.
Design Details
Film critic Francois Truffaut released his ground breaking, semi-autobiographical first film in 1959. His alter ego, Jean-Pierre Leaud, plays... more
Ships Within
2 - 3 business days
Average Rating (4.85 Stars):
Susan Miller
April 12th, 2024
Quite beautiful!
Lorraine Amer
April 9th, 2024
Have not received my Can’t send photo…. Have not received my purchase
Angel May
April 2nd, 2024
I sent it as a gift and she loves it. I have some of his original pieces. They take me away.
Nancy Rice
March 29th, 2024
This tote bag is gorgeous! I saw a picture of it and had to have it. The colors are just beautiful. The size is better than I expected, because it's larger than I had envisioned it. It is practical and functional as well as beautiful. I'm very happy with this purchase.
Pam Garski
March 29th, 2024
Pixels did an amazing job of taking a picture I created and transferring it to fabric. I’m very impressed with the quality of the prints and the bag. Thank you.
Jacki Sanoja
March 23rd, 2024
I love this bag so much! It is well made; the image is sharp and the colors rich.
Film critic Francois Truffaut released his ground breaking, semi-autobiographical first film in 1959. His alter ego, Jean-Pierre Leaud, plays Truffaut at 12 and would go on to do the same for 20 years in four other motion pictures.
"The Four Hundred Blows" is a key film in the French New Wave. Like his fellow French director sickly Jean Vigo (1905-1934) Truffaut (1932-1984) passed away far too young.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=2b_Y2wnHsqM
"Blows" ends with a justly famous freeze frame of the protagonist "in which
Truffaut conveys both promise and sadness, and demonstrates that the cinema offers no easy answers to the problems of living."
www.youtube.com/watch?v=N9I-gsap0po
I first became obsessed with photography and motion pictures while growing up in post WW2 Manila in the Philippine Islands in the late 1940's/early 1950's. Film noirs were a particular influence. But my first love remains the theater. I acted in numerous amateur productions from 1958 to 1978. In 1979 I earned a MA in drama from the University of Arizona; earlier getting a BA in English from the University of Minnesota, where I co-founded the first film society on campus and ran it for four years. While at the U of A, I studied with the master black and white photo essayist W. Eugene Smith (1918-1978) the last year of his life. I am the last person cited in Jim Hughes' definitive biography of Gene, as I wrote about attending his final...
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$25.00
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