Film Review
Having pretty well deconstructed the American crime thriller in
Pierrot
le fou, Jean-Luc Godard goes even further with his next
policier outing, driving the genre to its absolute limits of
abstraction and, in doing so, effectively ending his career as a
mainstream film director.
Guns, gore and gangsters are just some of the familiar film noir trappings which are woven, or rather
flung, into this singular offering to the cult of
série noire, a film which
has just about everything, except a plot and dialogue you can make
sense of.
Made in U.S.A.
is an anarchist intellectual's attempt to reconstitute film noir in
bold primary colours - a film that is both endlessly fascinating and
utterly bewildering.
Although it was inspired by an American thriller novel (
The Jugger by Richard Stark, a.k.a.
Donald E. Westlake),
Made in U.S.A.
is unlike any other crime film made before or since. It has some
superficial similarities with Godard's earlier film
Alphaville,
but, having only the sketchiest of plots and lacking an objective
viewpoint, it is altogether a very different cinematic beast.
From the start, the film sets out to alienate its audience. There
is no reassuring title caption, the characters are abstract
representations of film noir stereotypes, not real people,
dialogue is frequently drowned out by ambient sounds or inexplicably
muted, and what dialogue
is
audible is mostly devoid of any intelligible meaning. You might
easily think that the script was something the PG Tips chimps knocked
out one lazy afternoon after a liquid lunch (the liquid being something
considerably stronger than tea). Godard has never placed such
demands on his audience before and it is not too hard to see why
Made in U.S.A. is regarded as one
of his least accessible films.
So what are we to make of this film? Indeed, does it have any
meaning at all? The recurrent use of the word
liberté perhaps gives some
clue as to what Godard
may
have had in mind when he made the film. One interpretation is
that this is a film about freedom and the power that freedom confers on
the individual. The film's title appears to support this:
the U.S.A. is the self-proclaimed
Land
of the Free; it is also the most powerful nation on Earth.
And of course, the concept of freedom is intimately bound up with
existentialist notions of free will and identity - matters which
underpin much of Godard's work. To be free is to exist.
For Godard (and also many of his New Wave contemporaries), the crime
investigator, personified by such trench-coat wearing sleuths as Sam
Spade, Phillip Marlowe and Lemmy Caution, represent an idealised kind
of individuality, the true free spirit - superior moral beings who
serve the law but who are not bound by its constraints. Perhaps
the nearest thing to the private eye is the artist who has the freedom
to express himself in any way he wishes, unfettered by moral, economic
or societal constraints. From his work, it is evident that
Jean-Luc Godard aspired to this vision of the pure artist, and many
would argue that he is indeed the living embodiment of such a creature,
the true auteur.
The origin of
Made in U.S.A. is
almost as intriguing as the film itself and helps to shed some much
needed light on the film. Whilst Godard was working on
Deux ou trois choses que je sais d'elle
in 1966, he was approached by his former producer Georges Beauregard,
who was experiencing financial difficulties when Jacques Rivette's
La
Religieuse was banned by the Gaullist Minister of
Information. Beauregard hoped that Godard would make a low
budget film for him which would help him to finance his next
film. Godard agreed, and started work on
Made in U.S.A. whilst he was still
engaged on
Deux ou trois choses que
je sais d'elle. For the subject of
Made in U.S.A., Godard was
influenced by Howard Hawke's classic noir thriller
The Big Sleep, and originally
envisaged a re-make of that film, in which Anna Karina would play a
female version of Humphrey Bogart trying to unravel an insoluble
mystery.
The fact that Godard made
Deux ou
trois choses que je sais d'elle in parallel with
Made in U.S.A. is significant,
because cross-fertilisation between the two films was inevitable.
The former film was an abstract montage of familiar modern day images,
intended as a sociological essay reflecting the breakdown of modern
society and the unstoppable power of consumerism. The political
ideas that this film fermented in Godard's mind would contaminate
Made in U.S.A. in a profound
way.
One has only to compare this latter film with Godard's
earlier
Pierrot le fou to see that
political concerns had now begun to overtake the director's earlier
romanticism.
Made in U.S.A.
is consequently a far more complex and abstract work than it might have
been - a crazy mélange of
film
policier and
film politique,
although it also clearly merits another epithet:
film poétique.
© James Travers 2008
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Next Jean-Luc Godard film:
Masculin, féminin (1966)
Film Synopsis
Paula Nelson, a young journalist, arranges to meet up with her ex-boyfriend,
Richard Politzer, in Atlantic City. Shortly after her arrival in this
most ordinary of French towns Paul learns that Richard is dead, the victim
of an unknown assassin. Her journalistic instincts aroused, Paula begins
an investigation into her friend's murder, convinced that he may have been
implicated in some shady political intrigue. Her enquiries bring her
into contact with a strange collection of individuals, including a talkative
stranger named Typhus.
It is Typhus who dies next, his body making a suitably macabre adornment
to the writer David Goodis's apartment as he labours on his next crime novel
in the company of his girlfriend, Doris Mizoguchi. Doris is the killer's
next victim and neither Paula nor the police seem to be any closer to unmasking
the mysterious assassin. The investigation still has many more unexpected
turns to take, and if Paula isn't herself mistaken for the killer she may
well end up his next victim. Or she might even become a killer herself!
As any devotee of pulp fiction will know, anything is possible...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.