Film Review
Agnès Varda's second full-length film, and probably her most highly rated work,
is one of the defining films of the French New Wave. Like many of her Nouvelle Vague
contemporaries, Varda combines a direct, almost documentary style of film-making with
an intensely humanist perspective, whilst bringing in wider political concerns of the
day (here, reference to the increasingly fruitless war between France and Algeria).
Corinne Marchand's mesmerising performance as Cléo captures the anxiety of a self-centred
woman who suddenly realises she may be about to lose everything. Varda being one
of the few female film directors of the New Wave, the film has a distinctively female
perspective, and shows female vulnerability perhaps more convincingly than most other
film directors of this period. With its fluid photography, in expressive black-and-white,
the film has a timeless, poetic quality, which works well with its sense of tragic realism.
The film includes a sequence in which Cléo watches a silent black and white film,
a witty allegory in which New Wave director Jean-Luc Godard appears with Anna Karina.
This is perhaps one indulgence which jars, providing an awkward break in the flow of the
film. In the latter half of the film, Cléo's supposed cancer is contrasted
with the real malaise of the Algerian war, a daring gesture on the part of Varda (risking
the film being banned by the censors). Varda followed this with
two similarly off-kilter films in which she further developed her
idiosyncratic style of filmmaking:
Le Bonheur (1965) and
Les Créatures (1966).
© James Travers 2002
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Agnès Varda film:
Le Bonheur (1965)
Film Synopsis
Paris, 1960. Cléo is an attractive younger singer who is anxiously
awaiting the results of a medical examination. She has already convinced
herself that she has cancer and will soon die from the disease, so she thinks
morbid thoughts over the next two hours as she drifts without purpose around
the capital. A visit to a fortune teller appears to confirm who gravest
concerns and not even a meeting with her lover can take her mind off the
death sentence that will soon be pronounced by her doctor. She visits
her friend Dorothée, who is posing for a nude portrait, and then drops
in on Raoul, a projectionist who shows her a black comedy. With her
time nearly up, Cléo is walking across a park when she notices Antoine,
a young man in a uniform she has never met before. Doubtless he is
off to start his military service in Algeria. It is in this stranger
that Cléo confides her fear of dying. Comforted, she returns
to her doctor to hear what Fate has decided for her...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.