Grand Illusion Cinema - Seattle, WA

The Story of a Three Day Pass -- New 4K Restoration! - ends 6/10

Expired June 11, 2021 5:59 AM
Already unlocked? for access
Protected ContentThis content can only be viewed in authorized regions: United States of America.

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


"Mr. Van Peebles’ best-known film is “Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song,” widely seen as the movie that started the Blaxploitation movement. But his disarmingly romantic debut feature deserves a place in the canon, too" A.O. Scott, New York Times


“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.” Richard Brody, The New Yorker


“Van Peebles tells their story with a simplicity, freshness and spontaneity of the early New Wave films. Rarely does the camera capture so intensely the sense of exhilaration that accompanies liberation as Baird’s arrival in Paris.” Kevin Thomas, The Los Angeles Times


“Charming… brimming with humor and warmth and bittersweet truth." Judith Crist, New York Magazine

  • Year
    1968
  • Runtime
    87 minutes
  • Language
    English
  • Country
    United States
  • Director
    Melvin Van Peebles