Film Review
Marin Karmitz's main claim to fame is that he is the founder of MK2,
France's most successful independent film production and distribution
company. What is less well known is that Karmitz originally
founded MK2 primarily to distribute the films which he himself had
directed, innovative auteur pieces which strongly reflected their
author's social preoccupations and leftwing political leanings.
Karmitz's output as a filmmaker was modest, completely dwarfed by his
impressive tally as a producer. Between 1963 and 1972, he
directed four shorts and three full-length films, of which
Sept jours ailleurs is the first
and, arguably, most inspired. Although this latter film is not as
well-known as it should be, it is as astonishing an auteur debut piece
as any film made by Karmitz's Nouvelle Vague contemporaries.
Karmitz shot
Sept jours ailleurs
in 1967 and it powerfully reflects the mood of alienation and
disillusionment that was endemic across most strata of French society
at the time. This stemmed from a dissatisfaction with
consumerism, a mistrust of capitalism, a loathing for the establishment
(represented by its chief bogeyman, President de Gaulle) and a burning
contempt for bourgeois values - all of which would culminate in the
mass protests across France in May 1968. Like Jean-Luc Godard's
more overtly anarchic
Week-End (1967),
Sept jours ailleurs is eerily
prescient and provides an almost viscerally tangible impression of the
anger and frustration that was building in the colleges, factories and
households across France as the Fifth French Republic drifted blithely
towards its greatest crisis.
Plotwise, there is virtually nothing to the film. It's just an
anodyne tale of a married man indulging in a spot of marital infidelity
whilst away from home for a few days. The plot, what there is of
it, is the least important element of the film. Karmitz uses this
as no more than a coat hook on which to hang his concerns about the
time he is living through, concerns fragranced by a festering aura of
disenchantment and revulsion for the status quo. Right from the
first scene, the world that Karmitz plunges us into is bitterly
comfortless, almost alien, a kind of purgatory for the half-dead.
Dialogue comes only in fleeting snatches, brief interludes in an aural
landscape dominated by urban noises and the kind of electronic music
you would expect to hear in an avant-garde sci-fi movie.
The people in the film are not entirely dehumanised but they appear
remote and have difficulty connecting with one another. The only
scene with any real human feeling is the one in which the main
protagonist Jacques (Jacques Higelin) is seen playing with his infant
daughter. For the most part, Jacques inhabits a cold, synthetic
world that at times is frighteningly unreal, and his fleeting moments
of happiness with his mistress Catherine are like oases in a vast
existential desert. The extent of Jacques's alienation is most
apparent in the sequence towards the end of the film in which he is
taking a ride on the Paris metro. The musician is tempted to
reach for the door handle and an easy way out of his crushingly empty
existence. Then he drifts into sleep and when he comes to there
is an abrupt cut and we see him falling through water. When
Jacques reaches his home, he sees it not as a refuge or place of
comfort but as a tiny cell in a colossal apartment block, furnished
with those essentials of modern living that now appear to be mere icons
glorifying the pagan gods of consumerism and conformity. When the
film ends, with a succession of close-ups of Jacques contemplating the
abject meaningless of his life, we are left with the most profound
sense of despair.
© James Travers 2015
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Jacques is a 30-something musician who is married, has a young
daughter, but is far from fulfilled. Trapped in a sterile
marriage, he welcomes the opportunity to spend seven days on tour with
a modern dance company in the south of France. Whilst away from
home, he falls under the spell of an attractive young dancer,
Catherine, and as they pursue a passionate love affair he enjoys a
temporary release from his monotonous existence. All too soon, he
must return to Paris, to a life that means
nothing...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.