FFGR
A DREAM LONGER THAN THE NIGHT
UN REVE PLUS LONG QUE LA NUIT

Niki de Saint Phalle
France 1976 82 Color
Film description
Young Princess Camélia, magically transformed into an adult, must traverse a phantasmagoric and otherworldly landscape filled with enchanted beings, fantastical goblins, and human-like ghouls. Throughout her journey to adulthood, she navigates a minefield of patriarchy, facing a series of frightful encounters in this whimsical and surreal new world. In her second feature (and her first solo feature), the multidisciplinary artist Niki de Saint Phalle pursues her own take on the fairy tale, and the result is a visionary exploration of female desire that unfurls according to the logic of dreams and poetry. The film follows a princess (played by Saint Phalle’s daughter, Laura Duke Condominas) who, following a series of encounters with fantastical beings, is magically transformed into an adult, and finds herself navigating a frightening and surreal new world. A work suffused with ideas and strong ties to Saint Phalle’s work in other media (sculpture, painting, assemblage, etc.), A Dream Longer than the Night is both an exemplary artist’s film and an underseen gem of 1970s French avant-garde cinema.








