Film Review
Philippe Garrel's latest assorted musings on the impossibility of
attaining that elusive
amour
parfait represent not so much a throwback to the heady days of
the French New Wave as a morbid self-immersion in the preoccupations of
1960s youth culture, as channelled through the slightly warped
sensibilities of Jean-Luc Godard, Jean Eustache and Jacques
Rivette.
Un
été brûlant is proof conclusive that Garrel
is trapped in a time-warp, if not a time-loop, slavishly rehashing a
style of cinema which the nouvelle vague directors had themselves
abandoned by the early 1970s. After a decade in which he felt
impelled to stick with the grainy black-and-white look that somehow
came to epitomise modernity in French cinema of the 1960s, Garrel
finally deigns to return to colour, not the pristine high resolution
colour today's cinema audiences are used to, but the saturated,
slightly washed out colour that his New Wave predecessors gravitated to
once they had a little bit more money in their
pockets. Imitation may be the sincerest form of flattery, but
you can over-do it...
Long before
Un été
brûlant had its first screening, it aroused considerable
interest on account of a reputedly
outré
nude scene involving the actress Monica Bellucci. Needless to
say, the film didn't live up these prurient expectations and the
much-vaunted nude scene - a direct rip-off of the one featuring
Brigitte Bardot in Jean-Luc Godard's
Le Mépris (1963) - is
not much to write home about. The same can almost be said of the
performances, which do little to enliven Garrel's plodding narrative
and struggle to hold our interest. The director once again casts
his son Louis as the Bohemian lover, a part that certainly suits him
but which offers him little scope to demonstrate his range as an
actor. In spite of the fact that she gave birth just a few months
before making the film, Bellucci is as ravishingly beautiful as ever,
but again she is saddled with a dated archetype (the self-centred muse)
which does her few favours. The more interesting characters
in this ironic meditation on the limitations of free love were
given to the less experienced Céline Sallette and
Jérôme Robart, who both fail to make much of the golden
opportunity that Garrel offers them.
Un été brûlant
is something of a curate's egg. For those who regard the French
New Wave as the greatest thing that happened to French cinema, it is a
film with an irresistible allure - languorously slow, subtly sensual,
methodically intellectual and periodically brilliant in its stylisation
and pointed reflections on life. The flashback narrative
structure (another dated motif) works surprisingly well and helps to
conceal some weaknesses in the plot and the characterisation. The
references to the French New Wave classics, in particular Godard's
Le Mépris and Eustache's
epic
La Maman et la putain (1973),
are easily spotted - Garrel has no shame when it comes to stealing from
the masters - but these are ingeniously exploited to expose the truth
that lurks beneath the surface, the desires which can never be
satisfied, the futility of any quest for the absolute, be it in art or
in love. As a respectful homage to the French New Wave, the
film has much to commend it, although as a work of cinema in its own
right it is singularly lacking, both in substance and
originality. Perhaps it is time for Philippe Garrel to leave his
cosy 1960s time bubble and join us in the 21st century, to tackle
subjects which are more relevant to a contemporary audience and which
will have something of the resonance and bite of his earliest
endeavours, instead of leaving us with an uncomfortable sense of
déjà vu...
© James Travers 2011
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Next Philippe Garrel film:
L'Ombre des femmes (2015)
Film Synopsis
Paul met Frédéric, an artist, through a mutual
friend. He lives with Angèle, an actress who makes films
in Italy. Whilst waiting for his big break as an actor, Paul
works as an extra. This is how he comes to meet Elisabeth,
another aspiring actress. In no time at all, the two are deeply
in love. When Frédéric invites them to join him in
Rome, Paul and Elisabeth accept readily, little knowing what traumas
lie ahead...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.