Film Review
The interrelationship between life and art is an idea that has inspired many
filmmakers, but few have made it more central to their oeuvre than Jacques
Rivette. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the two boldly experimental
works that Rivette made near the start of his career,
L'Amour fou
(1969) and
Out 1: Noli
me tangere (1971), which intercut slices of real life with rehearsals
for stage plays in a way that makes the connection between life and art not
only self-evident but also essential. The length of these two films (the
first runs to fours hours, the second to just over twelve) means that neither
has received the exposure that Rivette's other films have enjoyed and which
they richly deserve. Even Rivette's re-edit of the second film,
Out
1 : Spectre (1972), which comes in at a more digestible four hours, is
hard to come by. This is indeed unfortunate, as no one can gain a full
appreciation of Jacques Rivette's art without watching these two films -
arguably the most important works of the French New Wave.
L'Amour fou is essentially a polished, slimmed down reworking of Rivette's
first film,
Paris nous appartient
(1961), which was made on a virtually non-existent budget over a three year
period and, poorly promoted, failed to find an audience. After this,
Rivette made a more conventional film,
La Religieuse (1966), based
on a novel by Diderot, but this created such a storm of controversy that
for a while it was banned in France. It wasn't the most auspicious
start to any filmmaking career and for the next few years Rivette occupied
himself with a profile of the legendary film director Jean Renoir in the
French television series
Cinéastes de notre temps. It
was through his interviews with Renoir that Rivette gained some dramatic
new insights into the art of filmmaking that would inspire him greatly on
his next film,
L'Amour fou.
There were two other important influences for this film - the work of the
avant-garde theatre director Marc'O and the
cinéma vérité
style of documentary filmmaking that was being pioneered by Jean Rouch, on
such films as
Chronique
d'un été (1961). For the leading roles in
L'Amour fou - a theatre director Sébastien (closely modelled
on Marc'O) and his wife Claire - Rivette chose the two leading members of
Marc'O's theatre company, Jean-Pierre Kalfon and Bulle Ogier, neither of
whom had had much film experience before this. The producer of Rivette's
Renoir documentaries, André S. Labarthe, was roped in to play the
television director filming the rehearsals of the play within the film.
Both Kalfon and Labarthe were given a free hand to develop their characters,
which were basically extensions of themselves (Kalfon had directed stage
plays prior to this). As a result, these two had a significant creative
input into the film, as did Ogier, who improvised many of her scenes.
Here revealing herself to be an exceptional talent, Ogier proved to be a
gift for auteur filmmakers. In addition to Rivette, with whom she worked
on several other films, including
Céline et
Julie vont en bateau (1974),
Duelle (une quarantaine)
(1976) and
Le Pont du Nord (1981), she also lent her talents to Marguerite
Duras, Barbet Schroeder and Alain Tanner.
That
L'Amour fou is a collaborative effort shows in its unapologetically
jagged feel and reluctance to cohere into a nicely homogeneous piece of cinema.
The convention that films should have a beginning, a middle and an end, and
must proceed thuswise in a steady, logical manner, is one that Rivette totally
disregards as he constructs a Russian Doll kind of narrative that reflects
and references itself endlessly, before finally looping round on itself.
Scenes mirror other scenes, and within some scenes there is a striking
mirror-effect (sometimes subtle, sometimes obvious), all creating the impression
that human beings are governed by simple rules that inevitably result in
repeated patterns of behaviour. The fact that Racine's play so closely
mirrors the experiences of the film's protagonists is not because life is
bound to imitate art, but because human nature is so resistant to change
across the centuries.
More perplexingly, there is no beginning or end to this film - just a never-ending
spiral from you can never escape. The last shot of the film - a close-up
on a blank stage with the sound of a baby crying - is the exact same one
with which it begins, so you could, if you wished, play the film on a continuous
loop. If you were to watch the film several times over (assuming you
have a dozen or so hours to spare - try it the next time you are on a longhaul
flight) you'll be surprised how differently it appears on each pass of the
loop. Each time you watch the film, it seems to change, altered by
your (imperfect) recollection of the previous viewing. Things shift
in subtle and surprising ways - this is
L'Amour fou's most unsettling
characteristic.
And this is essentially what the film is about - our inability to possess
for ourselves any kind of consistent objective reality. Because we
can only see things from one perspective at any time, because what we see
is shaped by our inadequate senses and unpredictable state of mind, inevitably
the picture that ends up in our heads and gets recorded (with even more imperfections)
in our memories is a biased, distorted view of reality. You might
call it the
Rashomon effect,
after the film by Akira Kurosawa in which four people give wildly different
accounts of the same event they witnessed.
In
L'Amour fou, Rivette films a television crew that is filming rehearsals
for a stage play that mirrors the disintegrating marriage of its director
and his wife. There are multiple realities at play here, all feeding
off each other, each forming a part of a complete picture that never quite
comes into focus, no matter how many times you watch the film. Rivette,
Labarthe and Kalfon form a kind of three-sided mirror, each a dedicated director
who hopes to find his own idea of truth through his art. Labarthe's
documentary inserts - shot using a handheld camera on 16mm film - have that
'60s
cinéma vérité quality that now looks quaintly
humorous, and (oddly) these give a greater sense of reality to what Rivette
himself shoots (on standard 35mm film) - mostly long static shots, sometimes
with the camera slowly tracking back and forth, more often with the camera
fixed on his actors.
It isn't just the difference in film quality that sets Larthe's footage apart
from Rivette's. With his frenetic use of zooms and camera motion, Larthe
is actively engaged in imposing his identity on the film; he interacts directly
with the people he is filming, often in a sly, conspiratorial manner.
By contrast, Rivette looks more like a disinterested observer, looking on
from a distance and allowing his actors to express themselves as they choose,
without being directly led. Both film directors are shaping reality
and presenting it in a way that suits him best - and the same applies to
Kalfon, who, as the theatre director, must choose how Racine's play is to
be interpreted. As these three very different individuals all have
their go at turning life into art, we see the process happening in reverse
- art becoming life through its dramatic impact on the two principal characters.
With hindsight, Sébastien would have known better than to have cast
his wife as Hermione in a play in which he takes the role of Pyrrhus.
In Racine's play, Hermione pines with an unrequited love for Pyrrhus, but
he is passionately in love with another woman, the Trojan captive Andromaque.
When Claire walks away from the play and Sébastien replaces her with
his ex-lover Marta, her identification with Hermione makes it inevitable
that she will suspect her husband of infidelity.
As the marriage slowly crumbles before our eyes, both characters withdraw
in on themselves - Sébastien becomes ever more absorbed in his work,
Claire seals herself in her apartment and does weird things with a tape recorder
before going off on a mad quest around Paris to find a sad-looking dog with
which she apparently shares a likeness. (Is this normal behaviour for
a married woman when her husband says she looks like a dog?) Sébastien
remains Monsieur Insouciant as his other half threatens to blind him with
a hat pin and shoot him with his conveniently loaded gun, before taking a
razor blade to herself.
In the second half of the film, Claire and Sébastien's positions are
suddenly reversed once the gun-toting wife has finally accepted the reality
of their predicament. Sébastien reacts to his wife's announcement
that their marriage is over like a man who has suddenly had a bucket of ice-cold
water tipped over him. His mental disintegration is as extreme as Claire's,
only played at a far greater speed. Dumbfounded, he picks up a razor
and starts slicing all the clothes he is wearing to ribbons. It is
a pathetic spectacle of self-abasement, more comic than tragic, but it allows
Claire to show that she is now the reasonable one. She manages to stop
Sébastien from cutting up his entire wardrobe and the couple arrive
at a fragile truce.
Now seemingly convinced they are the ideal married couple again, Sébastien
and Claire take an impromptu holiday in their apartment, with they proceed
to vandalise in every conceivable way. They daub crude pictures on
the walls, tear down the wall-paper, demolish a door and then smash a television
set with an axe - it's a Godardian cathartic surge that allows the repressed
inner violence to escape without anyone ending up on a mortuary slab.
No sooner are they back in their old routine than Sébastien receives
a phone call telling him that Claire has left him for good. He then
walks about a desolate Paris, looking like a man whose whole world has collapsed
in on him. This is the point at which you thank your lucky stars he
hadn't tried to stage a production of
Titus Andronicus. Heaven
knows how
that would have ended.
With Sébastien being such a self-absorbed narcissist and Claire being
a closet psychopath they were likely to separate at some point, but the former's
decision to stage
Andromaque with his wife in the role of Hermione
made this outcome a certainty. What is ironic is that whilst Sébastien
becomes obsessed that the play should represent life as a faithfully as possible,
Claire ends up being hell-bent on turning both of their lives into a Greek
tragedy. In forcing art to be like life, and life to be like art, the
play and the marriage end disastrously. But where
do the boundaries
between art and life lie, and can we even be sure that they exist?
As you finally stagger out of this labyrinthine hall of mirrors, you can't
help wondering whether art and life are just two facets of a more complete
fiction that is hidden from us, reflections of a deeper truth in some warped
celestial looking glass.
© James Travers 2016
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Next Jacques Rivette film:
Out 1: Noli me Tangere (1971)