Film Review
After the massive critical and commercial success of his debut feature
À
bout de souffle (1960), Jean-Luc Godard suffered a
considerable setback with his next three films. The censor
forbade the release of
Le Petit soldat owing to
extreme sensitivity at the time to the Algerian War, and the
cinema-going public shunned the two films that followed:
Une femme est une femme (1961) and
Les
Carabiniers (1961). To this date, critical opinion of
these three films remains divided, although
Une femme est une femme was very
well received by some critics at the time and was awarded a special
prizes at the 1961 Berlin Film Festival for its audacity and defiance
of cinematic norms. It is also one of Godard's lightest films,
lacking the laboured political posturing and self-conscious
introspection of his later work. Whilst it hardly deserves to be
ranked alongside the director's subsequent masterpieces, it is a fun
divertissement, easily one of his more enjoyable films.
Godard's first colour film,
Une
femme est une femme is an obvious tongue-in-cheek homage to the
American musical comedy and has great fun attempting to transpose the
artificial world of George Cukor and Gene Kelly to a drab wintry
Parisian setting. As in
À
bout de souffle, Godard goes to great lengths to expose the
artificiality of cinema. Not only does he repeatedly break the
fourth wall (for example, by having his actors bow before and look
directly into the camera), but he shoots and edits the film in a way
that could hardly be more jarring. Godard's use of sound is also
interesting - intermittent pauses of silence and seemingly random
bursts of music constantly serve to remind us that what we are watching
is not life, but only a fractured simulation of life. The overly
expressive performances of the three leads look as though they would be
more at home in a kindergarten play than in a film, and the story
itself is a grotesque inversion of the classic love triangle.
Belmondo's expressed wish to nip off and watch
À bout de souffle on
television, together with cheeky cameo appearances by Jeanne Moreau and
Marie Dubois (who have recently walked off the set of Truffaut's
Jules
et Jim and
Tirez sur le pianiste), also
blurs the boundary between fact and fiction.
Just as
À bout de souffle
can be read as a documentary on Jean-Paul Belmondo,
Une femme est une femme fulfils the
same function for Anna Karina, a Danish model who became Jean-Luc
Godard's muse and star of several of his films. Jean-Claude
Brialy and Jean-Paul Belmondo are pretty well relegated to supporting
roles as the camera follows Karina about like a lovesick
teenager. In a performance that won her the Best Actress award
at the Berlin Film Festival, Anna Karina brings a zest and vitality to
the film that more than compensates for her lack of acting experience
and imperfect diction (both of which Godard scurrilously exploits for
comic effect, most brilliantly in the closing line:
Je ne suis pas infâme, je suis une
femme). Karina's portrayal
of the liberated modern woman may at first look like a playful
caricature but it is in fact quite incisive and ahead of its
time. Angela is not only stronger, more down-to-earth than the
male protagonists (who generally behave like arrested adolescents), she
is also in complete control of her sexuality and is prepared to use it
to achieve her ends, without sacrificing her dignity. Anna Karina
was Godard's idealisation of womanhood and it is hardly surprising that
he chose to marry her, in fact during the making of this film.
Une femme est une femme is probably
the nicest love poem an actress could hope to receive from an admiring
avant-garde filmmaker.
© James Travers 2011
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Next Jean-Luc Godard film:
Une histoire d'eau (1961)
Film Synopsis
Angela is an attractive nightclub striptease artist who shares a small
Parisian apartment with her boyfriend Emile. One day, on the spur
of the moment, she decides that she must have a baby.
Unfortunately, Emile is not yet ready to father a child so he mockingly
suggests that she should avail herself of the services of his friend,
Alfred. Naturally, Alfred is more than willing to oblige Angela,
thinking that she will abandon Emile for him. In the end, Angela
gets what she wants without having to alter her domestic arrangements. After all, she is a woman...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.