Film Review
Possibly the most enchanting and intriguing of Chris Marker's many masterfully
crafted
essais cinématographiques,
Sans soleil is an
enticing meditation on the world and our place within it. Far from
being a conventional documentary with a clearly expounded thesis, it melds
together various political, religious, historical and philosophical themes
and provides an intensely involving - almost spiritual - experience for the
spectator. As we take in what we see and hear, making the connections
that we are invited to make of our own volition, we are compelled to reflect
on what it means to be a human being in a world of such diverse and extreme
cultures.
Like a butterfly intoxicated with all the wonder it encounters in a world
of seemingly boundess diversity, the film flitters from place to place, throwing
wildly contrasting images into our consciousness which, like pieces of a
jigsaw, we feel impelled to slot together in an attempt to make sense of
it all. From strange doll burning ceremonies in Japan to contemporary
political events in famine-torn Guinea-Bissau,
Sans soleil provides
a magical mystery tour that seems to want to encompass the entirety of human
thought and experience, even venturing to include a bizarre detour offering
a controversial analysis of Alfred Hitchcock's film
Vertigo.
Chris Marker first developed his distinctive technique in collaboration with
fellow avant-garde filmmaker Alain Resnais on such notable short films as
Nuit et brouillard (1955)
and
Les Statues meurent
aussi (1953). In common with these early films,
Sans soleil
reminds us of the primal importance of memory in our lives, the divine
mechanism by which we attempt to make sense of a world that threatens continually
to overwhelm us with its myriad of disconnected sense impressions.
Here, the vision that Marker ultimately presents us with is one that is every
bit as haunting as that which he previously left us with in
La Jetée (1962) - one that evokes
the same incredibly deep sense of loss and injustice. With one half
of the world succumbing to poverty of the most extreme kind, and the other
half sinking into a heaving morass of consumerist trash, humanity appears
to be on two roads to Hell that could not be more different - one natural,
the other self-inflicted, both the result of our lamentable inability to
understand our true nature and thereby coordinate our efforts to build a
better world.
In the starving deserts of Africa time grinds to an excruciating crawl; in
post-industrialised Japan, time races by so fast that it no longer seems
to exist. In the four decades that have passed since Chris Marker made
this remarkable film, the trends has continued apace to an alarming degree,
the schism between the developed world and its forgotten poor relation widening
to infinity thanks to galloping technological progress and the unbounded
greed of the rich and powerful. Watching
Sans soleil today you cannot
help but feel that it will serve as the most fitting obituary for our species
- every bit as ironic, and just as evocative, as Shelley's broken statue
of Ozymandias lost in the desert wastes of a forgotten civilisation.
© James Travers 2000
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Next Chris Marker film:
A.K. (1985)
Film Synopsis
Itinerant filmmaker Sandor Krasna offers his personal reflection on the threads
that connect the multifarious aspects of humanity through a film that combines
readings of letters with stark visual images. In his travels from Japan
to Guinea Bissau, Krasna assimilates the cultures and mores of disparate
human societies, contrasting how individuals deal with the horrors - natural
and manmade - that threaten both their well-being and existence. As
he does so, he offers a profound insight into the complexity and durability
of the human condition, revealing our shared nature in a world of ever increasing
diversity. We are left contemplating one question: just where is all
this taking us?
© James Travers
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