Chartres, France
Illiers-Combray Station
This French train station is located in a town renamed after the famed writer Marcel Proust's fictional name for the village.
Bayeux, France | C.1929
When Cinema Normandie opened in 1929 on a cobblestone alley near Bayeux Cathedral, the Société des Antiquaires de Normandie was horrified. They protested this “iron and brick” upstart, its entrance brazenly facing the medieval masterpiece, kitchens threatening the nearby Bayeux Tapestry with grease and flames. The antiquarians demanded an inquiry, warning that cinema would destroy the cathedral’s artistic character. Nearly a century later, this faded temple to early French film sits silent in its narrow passage, having outlasted its critics to become the very thing they feared it would replace: a relic worth protecting.
Inside, the building still carries small, unresolved mysteries of its own. A metal staircase built for the projectionist doubled as a fire escape, a practical afterthought in a building the antiquarians once called a fire risk to priceless medieval work next door. The door frames were painted blue, for reasons nobody fully recorded: maybe aesthetics, maybe wartime anti-aircraft precaution during the Second World War. Scraps of old film posters are still glued to the wooden panel by the entrance, quite possibly advertising the last picture ever shown there, the closest thing the building has to a final credit.
49.2751147, -0.7034504
Max file size is 40MB. JPEGs are preferred.
You do not have permission to view this form.