Jean Cocteau's directorial debut, (1930), is a landmark of avant-garde cinema that functions less as a narrative film and more as a "filmed freestyle poem". As the first entry in his Orphic Trilogy , it explores the grueling, often violent process of artistic creation through a series of surreal, dreamlike vignettes. Critical Overview
: Cocteau utilizes homoerotic imagery and gender-bending figures—such as a hermaphrodite and a woman-statue—to explore the role of sexuality in a "poetic apprenticeship". Visual & Technical Mastery
: Recurring motifs of mirrors and statues represent the artist’s struggle with self-reflection. Stepping through a mirror serves as a metaphor for entering one's own subconscious to find a "true self".