Four Films By Jean Cocteau
Celebrate visionary director Jean Cocteau’s birthday this July with four of his best films!
Testament of Orpheus
- Mon, Jul 21
- Tue, Jul 22
The Frida Cinema's seating is first-come, first-serve. For our Midnight Screenings, please plan on arriving by 11:30pm to ensure ample time for parking, picking up concessions, and securing optimal seats. Screening will begin promptly at midnight.
Director: Jean Cocteau Run Time: 80 min. Release Year: 1960 Language: French
Starring: Claudine Auger, Edouard Dermithe, François Périer, Henri Crémieux, Jean Cocteau
The Testament of Orpheus is the final film in our Jean Cocteau series—a dreamlike self-portrait where the artist literally walks through his own creations. Time bends, reality slips, and Cocteau—the mythmaker—steps in front of the camera to reflect on art, death, and immortality in a world of symbols and shadows. Part sequel, part epilogue to Orpheus, the film brings back familiar faces (including Jean Marais and María Casares), and introduces cameos from Cocteau’s contemporaries, including Pablo Picasso and Jean-Pierre Léaud. It’s a meditation on legacy and the surreal power of cinema to blur what is real and what is imagined. Shot in luminous black and white among ruins and strange halls, The Testament Of Orpehus is less a narrative than a moving poem—an invitation into the inner sanctum of one of the 20th century’s greatest visionaries.