The Broken Wings of Elijah Footfalls

Summary Inspired by Fellini, Chaplin, and magic realism, THE BROKEN WINGS OF ELIJAH FOOTFALLS revitalizes the image-driven art of the silent film. A lonely street juggler discovers a gypsy circus in a wooded valley. The film charts Elijah's love affair with Nina, the fire-breather, and his friendship with Ilja Wax, the circus director. View more details

The Broken Wings of Elijah Footfalls

Directed : Gabriel Judet-Weinshel

Written : Gabriel Judet-Weinshel

Stars : Tan Cahil Nicole Champagne Franck Dinet Nina Egli

0

Details

Genres : Drama

Release date : Apr 16, 2002

Countries of origin : United States

Language : English

Filming locations : New York, USA

Production companies : Wax Wing Films

Summary Inspired by Fellini, Chaplin, and magic realism, THE BROKEN WINGS OF ELIJAH FOOTFALLS revitalizes the image-driven art of the silent film. A lonely street juggler discovers a gypsy circus in a wooded valley. The film charts Elijah's love affair with Nina, the fire-breather, and his friendship with Ilja Wax, the circus director. View more details

Details

Genres : Drama

Release date : Apr 16, 2002

Countries of origin : United States

Language : English

Filming locations : New York, USA

Production companies : Wax Wing Films

Photos

Comments
Welcome to juqing comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Login to display more comments

Edit Focus

Peacock Alley

Peacock Alley

Claire Tree is a singer/dancer who goes after what she wants in a straight-forward, no-nonsense manner, so when she finds herself in the New York City hotel-suite, in fashionable Peacock Alley, of Stoddard Clayton, she wastes no time. Claire wants to get married. But, Stoddard, whom she cares for very much, has several proposals directed at her, none of which sound remotely like a marriage proposal; Claire tells him, in her straight-forward, no-nonsense manner that she wants to get married because, in her words: "I'm running away from the doubts and uncertainty and problems of a woman who isn't married." Stoddard thinks that nuptial bonds is a stupid old-fashioned tradition and fatal to romance. She says any man who says that is lying, and when she departs his suite at the crack of dawn, she seems convinced Stoddard indeed believes what he said he believed. But Claire has another option awaiting her...a Texan from home, and she promptly accepts his marriage proposal. But the house detective comes along after the ceremony and tells Tex his version of what he thinks goes on when a woman stays in a man's suite until the crack of dawn, and that doesn't jibe with his definition of a moral woman, and he ups and leaves her. Stoddard comes along and he thinks Tex has made a mockery of the marriage vows he took a short while ago, and he tells Claire that he will marry her, as soon as she can get an annulment from that day's ceremony, and they will make a go of it because they are 'different.' Somewhere in the 24-hour setting of this film, Claire plays a piano and sings a song called "In My Dreams, You Still Belong To Me," and then does a tango with a partner; and then does a solo-dance performance, interpreting a bullfighter...in costume...in 2-strip Technicolor.

All Filters