Film Review
The events of May 1968 would have far-reaching consequences and in this
grim political thriller director Jean-Pierre Mocky saw further
than most in anticipating what was to come. Whilst some
directors, notably Jean-Luc Godard, were content to take a cold
intellectual view of May '68 and its aftermath, one that was
sympathetic to the youth culture's embracing of political ideology,
others, like Mocky, were far more sceptical and were not afraid to air
their concerns about the dangers that lay in store for a society in
which its younger citizens felt alienated and resentful.
Solo is a harrowingly prescient
visualisation of where the world was heading, as an increasing number
of young people (mainly students) resorted to extreme measures to make
their voice heard. The anti-bourgeois, anti-capitalist crusade
prosecuted by a fanatical student group in this film would have its
real-life counterparts in the decade that followed - and could be a
terrifying glimpse of what we may see in the second decade of the third
millennium as the failings of capitalism become all too evident,
particularly for the younger generation.
Solo is both an astute piece
of socio-political commentary and a tense, gripping noir-style fugitive
thriller, one of Mocky's more inspired and daring films. The film
is provocative (to the extent that it ended up being released with an
18 certificate, a rare occurrence in France for a film of this kind) but it offers a far
more convincing depiction of youth
disillusionment with capitalism than, say, Godard's
La
Chinoise (1967), which fails to anticipate the threat that
was fermenting in the student halls and naively imagines that
disenfranchised youngsters will sit about all day arguing the finer
points of Maoist philosophy. Mocky shows us a far more unsettling
outcome - one in which the young put away their little red books and
become revolutionaries in the truest sense, taking up arms against a
society which, in their eyes, has been corrupted by capitalist
greed. The fact that these happy little anarchists are themselves
products of the bourgeois class (and are not ashamed to own expensive
cars and wear smart designer clothes) brings a note of bitter irony
which Mocky does not overlook in his film.
Although Mocky does attempt to lighten the tone a little with some
black humour (including an inept crime-fighting duo who look like
something from a Hergé comicbook or Peter Sellers film), the
bleakness of the subject matter pretty well suffocates all trace of
humour and the film ends up being almost relentlessly nihilistic.
There are some failings, in both the screenwriting and acting
(the film may have had greater impact if Mocky had not cast
himself in the lead role but had instead hired a more
experienced and charismatic actor), but these
are more than compensated for by the film's artistic strengths in other
areas. Marcel Weiss's beautifully atmospheric noir cinematography
gives the film a stifling nightmare-like texture and allows the tension
to build to an unbearable pitch as we are propelled towards the dramatic
climax.
Solo is not
only a slick noir thriller, of the kind that would prove immensely
popular in France in the 1970s, it is also, and more importantly, a
chillingly accurate prediction of what was to come in real life.
Forty years on, the film has a disturbing resonance, and it is
not too hard to see why. The youth of today
have much more reason to be angry than their predecessors did
in that halcyon spring of '68.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Jean-Pierre Mocky film:
L'Albatros (1971)
Film Synopsis
Vincent Cabral, a violinist and occasional jewel thief, returns to
France hoping to renew his acquaintance with his younger brother
Virgile, whom he has not seen for three years. Vincent's return
coincides with a spate of terrorist attacks which target the
bourgeoisie, mostly wealthy businessmen. The police investing the
attacks soon discover they are the work of anarchist students who are
hell-bent on overthrowing the capitalist system. When Vincent discovers
that his own brother is leading the terrorist group, he sets about
trying to find him. But as he does so, he arouses the suspicion
of the police and unwittingly becomes caught up in Virgile's private
battle...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.