Film Review
Having trodden the path towards ever-increasing obscurity in the 1990s, the eternal maverick
of French cinema, Jean-Luc Godard made a surprising come-back with
Éloge de
l'amour, his first major theatrical release outside of France for well over a decade.
More sophisticated and mature than Godard's increasingly abstract and inward-looking works
of the 1990s, it is a film which manages to capture the essence of Godard's cinema (his
political concerns, his love of character, his enthusiasm for cinema and literature, to
say nothing of his near-pathological contempt for mainstream cinema). At the same
time, it is a challenging work, packed with content whilst employing a minimalist approach
reminiscent of Robert Bresson (another great director who is often referred to in the
film).
The film is divided in two contrasting parts. It begins with an author's seemingly
doomed attempts to realise a 'project' (perhaps a film, but we cannot be certain of this).
This part of the film is shot beautifully in black-and-white, almost as a sombre elegy
to monochrome cinema. This includes some stunning night shots of Paris, immediately
evocative of the Nouvelle Vague cinema of the 1960s in which Godard played such a major
part. Two thirds of the way into the film, the mood and style change suddenly,
as if we have been propelled into a dream. Thanks to the marvels of the latest digital
technology, the images suddenly take on an otherworldly form, with overly saturated colour
and some occasional visual distortions.
The content of the film is as striking as its extraordinary visual form. In addition
to some brilliant examples of Godardesque humour (the best example being two young girls
gathering a petition to get film
The Matrix dubbed into Breton), social concerns
and philosophical observations abound - far too much to be picked up in a single viewing
of the film. Godard's loathing for Hollywood is brilliantly represented in the scene
where an elderly couple sell their life story to an American filmmaker ("let's book Juliette
Binoche"), but his wider political concerns are also very much in presence.
The relationship between real life and cinema are explored, rather ingeniously, though
the thoughts and experiences of a sensitive filmmaker (very probably Godard's alter ego).
There is some resonance with the cinema of Godard's contemporary, Alain Resnais, in the
recurring allusions to the link between time and memory. Whilst condemning Hollywood
filmmakers for exploiting memory just like any other commodity, to be bought and sold,
Godard shows us the true value of memory, an essential part of human existence that cannot
just be sold to the highest bidder.
One of Godard's most intelligent and thought-provoking films,
Éloge de l'amour
manages to avoid the self-indulgent excesses of the director's previous works, such
as
King Lear (1987) and
Hélas pour moi
(1993). Rather than provoking or mystifying its audience, this latest Godard has
an almost irresistible charm, offering some poignant reflections on life, love and the
dying art of cinema.
© James Travers 2002
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Next Jean-Luc Godard film:
Notre musique (2004)
Film Synopsis
A filmmaker Edgar is preparing to make a film about the four stages of love (meeting,
passion, separation and reconciliation). Having secured financial backing, his biggest
problem is to find a suitable young woman to play his female lead in the film. When
finally he finds his ideal actress, a young lawyer named Berthe, she dies soon afterwards.
Convinced that he has met her somewhere before, Edgar looks back on his recent past.
He recalls a time, two years ago, when he met an elderly couple who were in the process
of selling their wartime experiences in the French Resistance to a Hollywood film production
company. It was here that Edgar met Berthe for the first time...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.