Talk:Jour de fête
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[edit]This article was automatically assessed because at least one article was rated and this bot brought all the other ratings up to at least that level. BetacommandBot 04:29, 27 August 2007 (UTC)
Requested move 4 August 2016
[edit]- The following is a closed discussion of a requested move. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. Editors desiring to contest the closing decision should consider a move review. No further edits should be made to this section.
The result of the move request was: Moved Mike Cline (talk) 13:15, 12 August 2016 (UTC)
Jour de Fête → Jour de fête – Correct capitalization for French title. Also used in the English speaking world CriterionBFI. Rob Sinden (talk) 11:03, 4 August 2016 (UTC)
- Oppose. The current capitalization is correct and more common in the English-speaking world. — Film Fan 11:28, 4 August 2016 (UTC)
- No, it's not, in either case. — SMcCandlish ☺ ☏ ¢ ≽ʌⱷ҅ᴥⱷʌ≼ 07:17, 7 August 2016 (UTC)
- Support. Using correct capitalisation for the language in question is implied in the examples at WP:NCFILM#Foreign-language films and stated in other similar style guidelines such as WP:OPERATITLE. — AjaxSmack 23:06, 5 August 2016 (UTC)
- Support per WP:Manual of Style/Capital letters#Composition titles. The claim above that "the current capitalization is ... more common in the English-speaking world" is not borne out by a Google Books search [1]; the frequency is low to begin with, and the usage is mixed. Sources that capitalize this as "Fête" are almost exclusively news sites, following the AP Stylebook, which overcapitalizes, favoring treating all titles the same way rather than acknowledging any differences between languages (it's more expedient for journalists under tight deadlines to not have to look up something about French or whatever). WP does not care what journalism sites prefer when it comes to style matters, as they are not reliable for academic style questions; WP is not journalism, is not written in news style, and has its own style guide which says to use French capitalization rules for French titles (more precisely, it says to follow the capitalization of the original). There has been some confusion about this here and there because MoS's advice on titles of work has long been scattered across several pages. I started normalizing them a couple of years ago, but put that on a back burner for a long time. Have picked it up a little again. The use of French caps rules in French titles, German rules in German, etc. was stated in one place but not another, and illustrated without explanation at a third. For a detailed explanation of French, German, Italian, Latin, etc. titling rules in English academic writing, see New Hart's Rules (a.k.a. Oxford Style Manual) in the section on the titles of musical tions, which goes into it in great detail. MOS does not, because it's more practical for us, per WP:CREEP, to just use the title as-published, or for historical works, to use what the majority of reliable sources on such works, in English, prefer. — SMcCandlish ☺ ☏ ¢ ≽ʌⱷ҅ᴥⱷʌ≼ 07:17, 7 August 2016 (UTC)
- Support – French title should obey French spelling, otherwise you might as well remove diacritics or use a translation. — JFG talk 07:36, 8 August 2016 (UTC)
- The above discussion is preserved as an archive of a requested move. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on this talk page or in a move review. No further edits should be made to this section.
External links modified
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- Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20070609165325/http://www.dvdbeaver.com/film/DVDCompare2/jourdefete.htm to http://www.dvdbeaver.com/film/DVDCompare2/jourdefete.htm
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Not "unclear"
[edit]It's not "unclear" which version is which. There are three different versions of the film:
- The b/w version released in 1949.
- The 1964 version where Tati added a framing narrative of a painter who adds paint by hand to individual image parts of particular shots in the film by painting on the filmstrip.
- The 1995 restored living-color version co-funded by German ZDF. ZDF had actually gone back into the vaults and took the three different Thomsoncolor strips (red, green, blue) and printed them according to 1990s standards, like a classical Technicolor film.
It's pretty obvious at just a glance which version you're looking at. Here's a source with comparison shots of all three versions, plus an even newer BD telecine of the 1995 version: [2] --2003:EF:1700:B464:F469:E833:7086:4D82 (talk) 15:26, 16 December 2020 (UTC)