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  1. The Sea of the Ravens is a novel of historical fiction by Harold Lamb and illustrators George Barr, and Alicia Austin. It was first published in stand-alone book form in 1983 by Donald M. Grant, Publisher, Inc. in an edition of 1,925 copies of which 200 were specially bound and signed by the artists.

  2. Synopsis. Jean Epsteins short documentary filmed on the Breton island of Sein, which film preservationist and cinephile Henri Langlois called “one of the most beautiful documentaries in the history of French film, a true poem about Brittany and the sea.”. Crew. Details.

  3. As in Finis Terrae and Epstein's subsequent Breton films, it is the sea that embodies Nature at her most violent and mercurial, the central protagonist in the grimmest of human dramas - calm and beatific one moment, raging with the fury of an incensed maniac the next.

    • Jean Epstein
  4. Jean Epstein’s short documentary filmed on the Breton island of Sein, which film preservationist and cinephile Henri Langlois called “one of the most beautiful documentaries in the history of French film, a true poem about Brittany and the sea.

  5. The Hemitripterinae is a subfamily of the scorpaeniform family Agonidae, known as sea ravens or sailfin sculpins. They are bottom-dwelling fish that feed on small invertebrates, found in the northwest Atlantic and north Pacific Oceans. They are covered in small spines (modified scales).

  6. THE SEA OF RAVENS. by Jean Epstein. synopsis. Jean Epstein's short documentary filmed on the Breton island of Sein. Cineuropa - the best of european cinema.

  7. Jean Epstein’s short documentary filmed on the Breton island of Sein, which film preservationist and cinephile Henri Langlois called “one of the most beautiful documentaries in the history of French film, a true poem about Brittany and the sea."