Film Review
Until quite recently,
Bande à
part has been widely considered one of Jean-Luc Godard's minor
films, little more than a whimsical homage to the cheap American crime
novels that were so beloved by Godard and his French New Wave
contemporaries.
It is so easy to dismiss the film as merely an
intermediate step between Godard's dazzling first feature
À
bout de souffle (1960) and his multi-layered masterpiece
Pierrot
le fou (1965). It is true that these films deserve to
be grouped together and show a natural progression in their
deconstruction of the American pulp fiction thriller. Yet, far
from being a halfway house,
Bande
à part is a work of art in its own right, an insightful
piece of social commentary that is as profound and unsettling as
anything put forward by Godard.
In common with JLG's other thrillers,
Bande
à part derives from a trashy American crime novel, this
time Dolores Hitchens'
Fools' Gold.
By transposing the action of the novel from Los Angeles to Paris and
jettisoning the trite psychological rationalisation of the main
characters' behaviour, Godard sketches a portrait of disaffected French
youth that is both depressing and astonishingly true-to-life. The
film could almost be regarded as a documentary, so authentically does
it evoke the social, political and cultural estrangement of a
generation that had lost its purpose and identity, just as France
itself was struggling to find its own identity. Godard puts it
succinctly in one of the many flowery voiceovers that punctuate the
sparse narrative: "Franz thinks of everything and nothing,
uncertain if reality is becoming dream, or dream reality."
The three main characters - Odile, Franz and Arthur - are intended to
represent this
génération
maudite, three distinct individuals whose reality is almost
exclusively shaped by popular culture, specifically cinema and cheap
crime fiction. So effective is this cultural brainwashing (which
is mostly of an American hue) that the three protagonists appear to be
completely blind to their own cultural heritage and no longer have the
ability to think for themselves. Their slavish devotion to low
art is laughably evident in their decision to postpone the planned
robbery until after dark, out of respect for the conventions of the
série noire novel.
They fill in the dead hours beforehand by performing an act of cultural
sacrilege, racing through the corridors of the Louvre Palace in an
attempt to beat a pointless record. Presumably the reason
they all attend an English class is to try to fill a cultural
void. Unfortunately, their teacher is as disconnected from
reality as they are; she insists that it is far more important to know
how to spell 'Thomas Hardy' than to be able to ask directions to the
nearest hotel.
The three friends live in a dream world that has been fashioned for
them by popular culture. They look as if they are a gang, with a
common purpose (i.e. robbery), but as the film develops it becomes
apparent that they are as separate from each other as they are from the
society around them. This is made apparent in the film's most famous
sequence, in which they perform a dance together in a
café. At first, the three youngsters seem to be dancing in
unison, but their individual personalities soon begin to emerge through
their different steps and gestures, and the illusion that they are
really a gang is quickly dispelled. Ultimately, the only thing
that connects Odile, Franz and Arthur is their tragic susceptibility to
popular culture. Almost everything they do and say is a reference
to lowbrow crime fiction, and when reality does finally catch up with
them they are forced to assume the identity of pulp fiction
stereotypes: a corpse and a couple on the run.
The success of cinema, both as a medium of artistic expression and a
form of mass entertainment, has made it so powerful, so pervasive, that
it not only influences our behaviour, but also shapes how we view
ourselves and the world around us. Cinema (along with its bastard
offspring, television) has become a prism through which we are
conditioned, from our earliest moments of consciousness, to perceive
reality. Its clichés and idioms have become a universal,
readily adopted language that avoids the necessity for critical thought
and serious self-examination. In
Bande à part, Godard makes
this point succinctly by comparing a 'fake' killing with a 'real'
one. The scene in which Arthur simulates the death of Billy the
Kid appears realistic because it adheres to the conventions of
cinema. By contrast, the later scene in which Arthur is shot dead
by his uncle appears ludicrously protracted and artificial, because it
departs from the familiar conventions. A century after it was
created by two French brothers who felt it had no future, cinema has
now become the equivalent of the Ancient Greek Oracle, telling us what
is real and how things should be, draining our critical faculties and
our precious individuality as it does so.
Picking up where
Le Mépris (1963) left
off,
Bande à part
exposes the shallowness of popular culture in general and commercial
cinema in particular. From this point on, Godard's cinema would
become increasingly a rejection of cinematic convention and an attempt
to develop alternative, deeper forms of expression through the art of
cinema. By the time he had completed
Made
in U.S.A. (1966), Godard had effectively ripped the guts out
of American pulp fiction, exposing it for the vacuous pile of
reconstituted trash it is. Thereafter, he was able to devote
himself to his political concerns, although his preoccupation with the
effects of popular culture on society and individuals would continue to
underpin much of his work.
Made at that felicitous time in his career when Godard still had the
ability to reach out to a mainstream cinema audience whilst giving the
intellectuals something to mull over,
Bande
à part manages to be both profound and accessible.
The main characters are convincingly drawn (Anna Karina's Odile being
one of the most well-developed and sympathetic heroines in Godard's
entire oeuvre) and what the film lacks in the way of a coherent plot is
made up for by its unflagging sense of fun, which is sustained by some
irresistible jolts of typically Godardian humour (at times, the film
feels like a cheeky parody of Truffaut's
Jules
et Jim). The film's accessibility could explain why it
has long been considered one of Godard's lesser works, a victim of that
cultural snobbery which dictates that anything popular must be bereft
of true artistic merit.
Bande
à part is a film that proves the contrary - an engaging
crowdpleaser which oozes with Nouvelle Vague charm and which, if you
care to look beyond the surface whimsy, contains a message of truly
mind-blowing proportions. Where once our lives were rounded with
a sleep, now they are in danger of becoming no more than a sad
accumulation of cultural clichés. Hélas pour nous...
© James Travers 2013
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Next Jean-Luc Godard film:
Alphaville (1965)