Film Review
The French film director and critic Claude Chabrol described
Hiroshima mon amour as the best
film he had seen in 500 years. It is certainly a landmark in
French cinema, a modernist masterpiece that combines a love story of
exceptional poignancy with a sombre reflection on man's inhumanity to
man.
It is a film that still has a powerful resonance, not just
because it deals with universal and immutable themes, but because it
brings a terrifying proximity to the prospect of nuclear
annihilation. Love and global mass destruction may not sound like
plausible bedfellows but their juxtaposition in this film is extremely
effective and drives home the one great paradox of human experience,
our capacity to love and make war with equal intensity. Perhaps
our inability to forget what happened to Hiroshima is an expression of
love, but is it merely guilt masquerading as love? This emotional
confusion is in essence what this film is about. Just as the West
is still haunted by the atrocity that was perpetrated against two
Japanese cities in WWII, so the film's heroine remains mired in the
muddled trauma of a past love affair that ended in tragedy. By
not acknowledging the past honestly, we make ourselves its prisoner
ad pertpetuum. If we
had accepted the reality of
Hiroshima, nuclear weapons would long have been a thing of the past.
Hiroshima mon amour was the
first full-length fictional film to be directed by Alain Resnais.
Whilst Resnais is often associated with the French New Wave (by dint of
the fact that he came to prominence just as Truffaut, Godard, Rohmer
and the rest were beginning to make an impact), he was in fact already
an experienced filmmaker by the time he made this film and would
continually distance himself from la Nouvelle Vague. Since the
end of the Second World War, Resnais had made a respectable career for
himself as a documentary filmmaker, winning widespread acclaim with
Nuit et brouillard (1955), a
harrowing exposé on the Nazi concentration camps.
Other notable films include
Guernica
(1950),
Les Statues meurent aussi
(1953) and
Toute la memoire du monde
(1955).
Hiroshima mon amour
itself started out as a documentary, commissioned by the producers of
Nuit et brouillard as an
anti-H-bomb protest film. After several attempts, Resnais
realised that he was not equipped to make a film about the atomic
bomb. He admitted as much to the novelist Marguerite Duras, and
she replied: why not make the film into a love story? This
off-the-wall idea appealed to Resnais and so he persuaded Duras to
write the script, her first for the cinema. Duras not only
extricated Resnais from his creative impasse, she also enabled him to
craft one of the most sublime pieces of cinema art, one for which she
deserves a fair proportion of the credit (along with the two lead
actors, Emmanuelle Riva and Eiji Okada).
The film begins with one of the most striking opening sequences ever
seen in the cinema - a beautifully composed montage of close-up shots
of a couple making love. Never before had audiences been
subjected to such an overt expression of carnal desire, and yet so
artfully constructed is this sequence that it transcends mere
eroticism. Silken limbs that are initially showered in ash are
cleansed by water drops - just as we may wish that our collective
memory of Hiroshima may be washed away by the passage of time.
What then follows is a ten-minute sequence comprising documentary
footage, over which the two lovers purge their thoughts after their
love-making. "You have never seen Hiroshima", he insists.
She is adamant that she has. When prompted by her Japanese lover,
the woman recounts her first love affair, with a German solider just
before the liberation of France in 1944. As the Japanese man is
still traumatised by his recollection of the atomic explosion that
wiped out his entire family, so the French woman remains scarred by the
dismal outcome of her first amorous adventure. The more they
reflect on their past, the more the two protagonists realise they are in
love - but by yielding to this love, do they betray the past or
sanctify it?
One of the central motifs of the film - the relationship between time
and memory - is one that Resnais would explore in many of his
subsequent films (but never with the blistering lucidity that we see
here). As the heroine's past and present realities are
inter-played, we sense that time is an entirely illusory
phenomenon. Memory obliterates any notion of temporal separation
- it as if the heroine's two sets of experiences are happening
concurrently, the one colouring the other. It would appear
that the heroine cannot even distinguish her latest Japanese lover from
the German soldier she had a love affair with fourteen years
previously. Is it possible that the two episodes are merely two
reflections of the same one occurrence, like a sculpture seen from two
different angles? Just as time collapses, so does space -
tracking shots of the heroine's home town are inter-cut with those of
neon-lit modern-day Hiroshima, implying the two separate realities are
in fact one. But is this conflation of time and space no
more than a desperate attempt by the heroine to reconcile herself with
her traumatic past? The fact that she is reluctant to continue
her Japanese love affair shows us the power that her past exerts over
her - her memory is a vicious web from which she can never escape, not
until she can resolve the emotional confusion.
The relationship between time and memory is just as central to
Resnais's next film,
L'Année dernière à
Marienbad (1961), although in this film the director employs
a far more abstract approach. The concrete certainties that make
Resnais's first film so accessible and readily understandable are
virtually obliterated in his second, which, with its dreamlike
composition, surreal flourishes and absence of solid characters, is
frustratingly ambiguous, and yet just as hypnotic and
meaningful. After these two great works, Resnais's
subsequent career would be something of an anti-climax, although
critics and audiences would be kind to him and he would periodically
deliver films that recaptured his former brilliance - for example,
Muriel
(1963),
Providence (1977) and
Coeurs
(2006). Whilst the films of Alain Resnais continue to beguile, stimulate and provoke,
none can match the unsullied beauty and reflective potency of
Hiroshima mon amour,
one of the greatest of all French films.
© James Travers 2011
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Alain Resnais film:
L'Année dernière à Marienbad (1961)
Film Synopsis
In the summer of 1957, an aspiring French actress travels to Hiroshima in
Japan to work on an anti-war film. The city was totally destroyed when
the Americans dropped a nuclear bomb on it at the end of the Second World
War, but now it has been rebuilt and shows little sign of the past devastation.
During her brief stay, the woman meets a Japanese architect and the two enjoy
a fleeting romance, even though they are both married. She is keen
to talk about Hiroshima, but he insists that she has seen nothing in the
city. One morning, after spending the night with her lover, the actress
admits that she will soon have to return to her home in Paris.
As she spends one last day in the company of her Japanese lover, wandering
the streets of the unfamiliar city, the young actress recalls her past in
Nevers, before the war. Then, barely a woman, she had another lover
- a German soldier who was shot dead during the Liberation. Her punishment
was to have her head shaved, after which she was locked up in a cellar.
The day she returned to Paris with her parents was the very same day on which
the Americans detonated their demonic bomb over Hiroshima. Now she
must leave Hiroshima to return to Paris, leaving another love behind her...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.