Film Review
If you buy a DVD of a film made in the last few years you can be pretty
sure that it comes with a complementary feature showing how the film
was made. This will probably not be the case for
Pourquoi (pas) le Brésil,
since the film itself and its Making Of feature are combined into one
piece, the result (part meta-film, part documentary) being one of the
most insightful and compelling explorations of the creative process
that cinema has given us to date. The film tells the story
of how Laetitia Masson, one of France's most highly regarded auteur
filmmakers, lost her way in trying to adapt a novel by the
controversial writer Christine Angot and ended up making a film about
the fraught process of making a film when the creative juices
stubbornly refuse to flow.
At the time she was offered the chance to adapt Angot's novel (by
producer Maurice Bernart), Masson was in something
of a personal crisis. A substantial
bank overdraft and a severe case of creative block had drained her
confidence and propelled her into a state of depression. The
director's grim state of mind is vividly evoked in her film through
some harrowing moments of introspection, but what is more striking is
her fierce resilience, her determination to hold on and not sacrifice
authenticity for commercial expediency. There is a
delicious irony in the fact that by failing to do what she set out to
do, and by showing us how she failed, Masson manages to create her most
inspired and incisive work to date, a superlative example of auteur
filmmaking that serves as a beacon of hope to those who find themselves in her position.
Pourquoi (pas?) le Brésil
is a film that is both fascinating and extremely poignant.
Masson's attempts to sell her ill-thought-out film to understandably
sceptical actors (Daniel Auteuil and Francis Huster) are as comical as
they are heartwrenching and you can see why selling and marketing do
not feature too highly on her CV. Life ends up imitating art as
the turbulent love affair of Angot's novel begins to infect and
potentially jeopardise Masson's relationship with her
husband. Ultimately, the fiction that the director is
trying to create becomes inextricably interwoven with her own life, an
effect that Masson achieves by inter-cutting her own story (filmed as a
Making Of documentary) with a dramatised account of her own story
and filmed sequences from her screenplay based on
Angot's book. The boundary between reality and fiction is blurred
even further by Masson's decision to cast Elsa Zylberstein as both
herself (Masson) and the heroine of Angot's story.
What the spectator is given is neither an objective account of how a
film is made nor a romantic drama, but an unsettling merging of the two
which portrays the experience, not the process, of making a film.
Pourquoi (pas) le Brésil is
much more than a Godard-like attempt to deconstruct the art of
filmmaking. What it offers is something far more intimate and
revealing, a unique insight into how a writer or film director can become
completely overtaken by his work and end up in an existential no man's
land, utterly lost in the labyrinth of creative possibilities.
Sometimes it takes a colossal failure to teach us some fundamental
truths about the world and about ourselves. By failing to make
the film she wanted to Laetitia Masson gives us something far more
valuable, a rare pearl that exposes the inner turmoil of the dedicated auteur
and the complex interdependencies between life and art.
© James Travers 2010
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Next Laetitia Masson film:
Coupable (2008)
Film Synopsis
The film director Laetitia Masson is in a bad way, both financially and
creatively. Producer Maurice Rey offers her a lifeline by asking
her to adapt Christine Angot's latest novel
Pourquoi le Brésil?, which
recounts the author's passionate love affair with a journalist.
But Laetitia has already read the book and is convinced that it is
completely inadaptable for the cinema. Compelled by her financial
situation to accept Rey's offer, Laetitia begins to write a screenplay,
but immediately she runs into difficulty. Unsure how to capture
the authenticity of Angot's novel, she tries to draw on her own
experiences in an attempt to understand what attracts one person to
another. Having completed her script, Laetitia faces an even
greater obstacle. The tight budget will prevent her from using
the locations that featured in the original novel and, worse, she
cannot find an actor and actress to play the principal roles. The
project appears to be doomed...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.