Film Review
Alain Resnais's
Je t'aime, je t'aime
is, to cinema, pretty well what Marcel Proust's
À la recherche du temps perdu
is to the novel - an ambitiously innovative attempt to explore the
interrelationship between memory and experience within the confines of
a popular medium of expression. Both are challenging works of
art, but they take us into territory that is essential for a deeper
understanding of human experience and the nature of reality.
Throughout much of his career, and certainly his early work, Resnais
has shown an almost compulsive fascination with memory, that remarkable
facility of the human brain which gives us an awareness of identity and
our passage through time. Without memory, life would be reduced
to a single point of consciousness - we would exist only in the present
moment. In
Je t'aime, je t'aime,
Resnais takes us on the weirdest journey yet and reminds us of the
importance of memory and its role in shaping our lives.
The plot is lifted almost entirely from
La
Jetée (1962), a short film made by an avant-garde
contemporary of Resnais, Chris Marker. A supposed experiment in
time travel (involving a cerebellum-shaped time machine) is the pretext for a
man's journey back into his own past
to relive a precious moment of his life. Naturally, the
experiment goes horribly awry and our hero becomes trapped in a
perpetual time loop, continually re-experiencing fragments of his past
life in a chaotically non-chronological sequence. Gradually, the
protagonist's life story begins to take shape and what first seem to be
random recollections ultimately gel into a coherent, intensely poignant
narrative, the story of a man haunted by a doomed romance that led him
to murder and an attempted suicide.
The fact that the film lacks an objective external viewpoint makes it
impossible to decide whether reality has any bearing on the plot.
The whole thing might be just a dream. It might equally be the
fabrication of a dying brain - a terrifying concept if you think about
it. Or it could be that the hero genuinely has been subjected to
a botched time travel experiment (along with a cute little
mouse). As in many of Resnais's films, the boundary between
reality and imagination is virtually impossible to discern - as it
often is in real life. It is worth remembering that what we think
of as reality is no more than an imperfect mathematical model created
by our brains - an artificial construct from the same machine that
manufactures our dreams. How can we be sure that anything is
real? In a sense, everything we are aware of is a dream.
Je t'aime, je t'aime has
strong echoes of Resnais's earlier masterpiece
L'Année dernière à
Marienbad (1961), a film which employs a similar fragmented
narrative structure but with a far more recognisably dreamlike feel to
it. The similarity of these two films is striking, and each
exerts a powerful hold over the spectator in spite of their radical
departure from the conventional narrative form. Just as
Marienbad was once dismissed as
pretentious nonsense by some critics, so
Je t'aime was misunderstood and
ill-received on its first release in the eventful year of 1968. A
commercial failure it may have been, but
Je t'aime, je t'aime is a
remarkable piece of cinematic art, assuredly one of Alain Resnais's
most inspired and haunting films. Sometimes it is good to be
reminded of the importance of memory - that miracle of nature by which
we are permitted to traverse the fourth dimension and be aware of the
fact. Without memory, time would cease to exist and life would be
totally meaningless.
© James Travers 2013
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Next Alain Resnais film:
L'An 01 (1973)
Film Synopsis
Leaving hospital after a failed suicide attempt, Claude Ridder is
accosted by two strangers, who make him a bizarre proposal. They
invite him to participate in an experiment which could change the
course of human history. With nothing better to do and having
nothing to lose, Claude allows the strangers to drive him to a secret
research laboratory, which is disguised as a centre for agronomical
research. Here, the scientists tell Claude that they intend to
allow him to relive one minute of his past, exactly one year ago...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.