Film Review
Over the past two decades, the Czech-born filmmaker Stan Neumann has
earned a reputation as one of France's leading documentarists, best
known for his work on the television series
Architectures (2001-2003).
L'Oeil de l'astronome is his first
fictional work, a period drama based on recorded events in the life of
the astronomer Johannes Kepler. Neumann's fascination for
both Kepler and his work, which revolutionised the science of astronomy
in the early 1600s, is immediately evident from the detail he packs
into the film. Clearly, Neumann undertook many, many hours of
research before he put pen to paper and his film is probably the best
introduction to Kepler's work that any science enthusiast could hope
for. The musical signature of elliptical orbits provides one
humorous detour and the physics of lenses is covered with particular
care and lucidity, although the more squeamish spectators may find it
hard to keep their gaze on the screen as an animal's eye is slit open
(à la Buñuel) and the lens plucked out of the horrible
squelchy mess.
L'Oeil de l'astronome is
daring both in its choice of subject matter (17th century astronomy is
by no means the obvious subject for a feature film) and the way in
which Neumann tackles it. 'Ten nights in the life of Johannes
Kepler' is how the film may be summarised, with the emphasis on the
word
night. Neumann
doggedly eschews artificial light and shoots the entire film at night,
using only light sources that would have been around in Kepler's day,
namely candles and the moon. A few years ago, this would have
been an impossible technical feat (the lighting level being too low to
be picked up on film), and it is only with the aid of a state of the
art digital camera (the Canon Mark IV) that Neumann was able to pull it
off. As a result, the film has a unique and strangely alluring
ambiance which adds hugely to its poetry and mystique. The
oppressive physical darkness that envelops the troll-like Kepler as he
perseveres with his painstaking researches is a potent metaphor for the
ignorance and superstition of the age in which he lives.
Whilst high on educational content,
L'Oeil
de l'astronome does struggle to be an entirely satisfying piece
of cinema, mainly on account of an irksome tendency towards am-dram
theatricality in a few scenes. If it were a conventional period
drama, the film would be hard to take seriously, despite a committed
lead performance from Denis Lavant, an improbable but inspired casting
choice for the part of Kepler. Fortunately, Stan Neumann
opts for something very different, a personal evocation rather than a
slavishly authentic and dramatically taut account of Kepler's work and
life.
L'Oeil de l'astronome
is a film that is most likely to be appreciated by those with an
interest in the process of scientific discovery but its quirkiness and
eerie lyricism gives it wider appeal. How Neumann managed to
resist the temptation to include a direct reference to Georges
Méliès's
Le Voyage dans la lune (1902)
is a mystery, but by way of compensation his film ends with a more
subtle allusion to the birth of cinema - justified because cinema is
(as we all know) one of the happy by-products of the science of optics.
© James Travers 2013
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Film Synopsis
In the summer of 1610, one of Galileo's famous telescopes arrives in
Prague, the capital city of the Germanic Empire. For a period of
ten days, Johannes Kepler, mathematician and astronomer to Rudlolf II,
has the privilege of using the telescope to study the night sky.
In the process, he makes some remarkable discoveries, not just about
the celestial orbits that have long fascinated him, but also about the
frailty of human nature. As Kepler is studiously engaged in his
work, there is a plot to assassinate the emperor, and not everyone is
sympathetic to the astronomer's attempts to unravel the secrets of the
heavens. Many believe he is a sorcerer, in league with the Devil
himself...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.