Film Review
Jean-Luc Godard's exploration of the youth culture of the mid-1960s is
a as revelatory as it is incisive, a film that continues to fascinate
with its uncompromising depiction of a generation torn between the
tawdry allure of rampant consumerism and the major political concerns
of the day. Godard's portrait of what he terms the Pepsi
Generation is a complex and astute social document, which shows how an
increasing political awareness in the young was beginning to conflict
with an all-too easy acceptance of American pop culture.
With uncanny prescience,
Masculin,
féminin anticipates the dramatic events of 1968 and the
youth-led cultural revolution that would change the face of the western
world in the following decade.
Controversially, Godard represents the schism between the
proto-revolutionaries and those who have sold out to consumerism as
just the latest manifestation of the eternal divide between the
sexes. The boys are revolutionary intellectuals, whistling
Bach and composing poetry when they are not busily occupied
spray-painting anti-American slogans all over town; the girls are
self-centred, politically naïve floozies who are simply out for a
good time. It is easy to condemn Godard for resorting to such a
simplistic demarcation but it effectively gets across the fundamental
dichotomy of youth culture of the mid-60s - an over-eagerness to
embrace American culture in all its facets, set against a burgeoning
political conscience - a cocktail that would give rise to a powerful
counter-culture movement on both sides of the Atlantic. How
ironic that a film which had so much to say to the young should end up
being given an 18 certificate, because it dared to breach the sacred
middleclass taboos of birth control and
abortion.
The two sides of the pro- and anti-American cultural divide are
represented in the film by two charismatic young actors - Jean-Pierre
Léaud and Chantal Goya - who now appear to be the very
personification of sixties cool. After his impressive
debut, aged 14, in François Truffaut's
Les 400 coups (1959),
Léaud would become the actor who was most emblematic of the New
Wave of French cinema, a phenomenon which was itself in the vanguard of
France's post-war cultural revolution. Léaud epitomises the
Nouvelle Vague's idea of rebellious youth and would be pretty well
typecast as the romantic anti-bourgeois rebel for much of his
subsequent career. Goya, by contrast, was the archetypal sixties
babe, a yé-yé girl who would have a successful career as a
pop singer, renowned for her twee children's songs. Just as
Léaud's character represents wholesale rejection of Americanism,
be it imperialist adventurism in the Far East or the intellectually
stultifying intrusion of pop culture, Goya's depicts the mindless
acceptance of all things American to satisfy the baser instincts, the
need for comfort and prosperity.
The mutual incompatibility of the film's two main characters
(Léaud the pretentious rebel, Goya the consumerist slave), their
inability to communicate even when they are in bed together, provides
the film with its best running gag, but it also serves as a typical
Godardian dialectic to examine the consequences for France's own
fractured cultural identity as American influences began to assert
themselves in the 1960s. The film ends with Godard's most
chilling commentary on the dehumanising influence of capitalism: having
given a completely emotionless account of the death of her boyfriend (a
death which we suspect she may have caused), Madeleine considers the
prospect of an abortion with what appears to be complete
indifference. What Godard whimsically refers to as the children
of Marx and Coca-Cola is a generation that, having no notion of the old
values, will tear itself inside out over the coming decade as it seeks
to reconcile its political concerns with its addiction to
American-style capitalism - a subject the director addresses with some
feeling in his later film,
La
Chinoise (1967).
The composition of
Masculin,
féminin is almost as daringly innovative and provocative
as its subject matter. As on his earlier film
Vivre
sa vie (1962), Jean-Luc Godard rejects the conventional
narrative form and instead constructs the film from fifteen
self-contained, loosely connected tableaux. For much of the time,
the camera is trained on one character who gives partially improvised
responses to questions asked by another character off-camera - a
familiar Godardian device which at times makes the film feel like a
serious sociological study of young people. (Some of the
non-scripted answers that Godard records are genuinely shocking,
showing a degree of self-absorption and political naivety that no
screenwriter would dare put on paper, through fear
of being condemned for resorting to blatant caricature.)
Godard's use of sound is just as interesting. Familiar
sounds, like the jarring tap-tap of typewriter keys,
are amplified to sound like fierce bursts of gunfire,
creating the impression that a bloody revolution is
taking place just out of camera range, underscoring the
cultural conflict taking place on the screen and in
the minds of the protagonists.
Other sequences are far more stylised, quirky excursions into Godardian
whimsy which show us the grimly violent underbelly of Parisian life
that is totally unseen by bourgeois eyes. In one scene, a woman
chases her husband out of a café and thereupon fires a gun at
him in the street; the only reaction this provokes from the supposedly
politically engaged Paul is an irritated appeal for the woman to close
the door after her. The film's best anti-bourgeois gag surfaces
when Paul is told he must use Le Figaro (a notoriously rightwing
newspaper) as a substitute for toilet paper, the only use it could
possibly serve in a leftwing-oriented household. In another
scene, Paul reacts with what can only be described as inhuman
nonchalance when a man stabs himself to death after a pointless
argument. These rather crude digressions into the darkly surreal
are invariably amusing but they also remind us of the momentary
distractions that we encounter in our daily existence, paradoxes that
somehow fail to engage our interest as we plod further down the mundane
furrow we have dug for ourselves. In life, we see and engage with
only what interests us. Everything else is just background noise
- like the unflattering cameo appearances that Brigitte Bardot and
Françoise Hardy make in this film.
Of all Godard's political films (of which this is one of the earliest),
Masculin, féminin is
perhaps the most multi-faceted and engaging. It may not be as
strident or as politically coherent as some of the director's later
political films - notably
La Chinoise (1967) and
Week End
(1967) - but it has that unmistakable mix of Nouvelle Vague poetry and
anarchic playfulness which makes it one of the most digestible and
stimulating offerings from Godard's intellectually challenging middle
period. Perhaps no other film by Jean-Luc Godard captures the
spirit of the 1960s, and hints at the turbulence to come, more than
this witty and insightful piece of social commentary.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Jean-Luc Godard film:
Deux ou trois choses que je sais d'elle (1967)
Film Synopsis
His military service finally over, Paul, a young man in his early
twenties, returns to Paris in search of work. He finds a job with
a trendy magazine where he meets Madeleine, an attractive woman of his
own age who has set her sights on becoming a pop singer. They
appear to be ill-matched: Paul is politically minded and rails against
American imperialism, whilst Madeleine and her friends are deeply
enamoured of American culture and are concerned only with making a
better life for themselves. Despite their differences, Paul and
Madeleine are instantly attracted to one another and immediately embark
on a love affair, which Madeleine's friends, Elisabeth and Catherine,
do their best to frustrate. As Madeleine's singing career begins
to take off, Paul starts a new job with a market research company, only
to discover the shallowness of his own generation...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.