• _In Praise of Love_

    From septimus_millenicom@q.com@21:1/5 to All on Sun Sep 18 19:04:35 2022
    "Every thought contains the debris of a smile."

    paraphrase, _In Praise of Love_

    I haven't seen _Eloge de l'amour_, one of my favorite Godard
    films, in more than a decade. It would have been among his
    most elegiac work under any circumstances, but is particularly
    poignant the week he dies of assisted suicide, like the heroine
    of the film Berthe (Cecile Camp) does. It touches on war-time
    atrocities committed by Serbs against Kosovo, just as news
    breaks of more mass graves and evidence of torture in Ukraine.
    Aphorisms, epigrams, and startling images distinguish _In Praise
    of Love_ as in so many late period Godard films, but they feel
    especially well-earned in this deeply emotional story; these are
    organic to the characters, rooted in an unusually dense texture
    of themes and lived stories.

    The first two thirds of the film, shot in B&W, find Edgar (Bruno
    Putzulu) planning and casting a project which could be a novel,
    film, play, opera, cantata ... He is vague about the form but
    wishes to trace the stages of love through the experiences through
    youth, adulthood, and old-age; the middle stanza has so far
    eluded his grasp. He is haunted by Berthe, whom he has once met
    in Brittany; perhaps her mercurial mind and acid tongue embody an
    ideal of that elusive Adulthood? Once an artist up north, she
    has been working as a cleaning lady to care for her son. Still
    full of fire and just as opinionated, she rejects a role in his
    project. Later on Edgar finds out from his circle of friends,
    financiers, and associates that she has died. The last third
    of the film loops back to their initial meeting in Brittany, where
    her family -- part of the French Resistance in WWII -- sells their
    war time exploits to "Spielberg Associates." It is supposed to
    star Juliette Binoche, and adapted by William Styron (the author
    of _Sophie's Choice_). This haunting, heart-breaking finale
    is shot in startling over-saturated colors using digital video,
    as if to emphasize Berthe's life-force has ignited his imagination.
    We learn that almost all the phrases and epigrams percolating in
    Edgar's head have come from Berthe and her grandfather. (He
    opines that the Resistance has its youth and old-age, but no
    adulthood, anticipating what Edgar attributes to Love.)

    The film's reverse chronology is like Harold Pinter's _Betrayal_,
    although the betrayal is of a spiritual rather than carnal kind:
    Edgar's lack of conviction, the aging Resistance Fighters' selling
    out to the Americans, the art-world's lack of funding to fend off
    Hollywood's $50,000, fancy cars, helicopters. The film is
    criticized for its alleged anti-Americanism, for claiming that the
    US has neither a name nor a history and resorts to buying up
    foreign tales*. I think the film is equally critical of old Europe,
    which has become calcified and resistant to changes, much like the
    old folks in Edgar's amorphous project. the US is Edgar's Youth who
    looks to the future at the expense of the past. As for Berthe's
    criticism that the US doesn't even have a proper name -- Edgar
    professes he doesn't know her name, either. (Ihe imdb credits list
    her character as just "Elle.") He proceeds to blame her for the
    collapse of his plans, sullying her memory with a snide "she
    is no Berthe Morisot." Edgar is likely a stand-in for Godard
    himself, searching for an artistic/spiritual path forward, perhaps
    unlike Terrence Malick after _The New World_. In that sense, _In
    Praise of Love_ is an earnset autocritique; Godard seems to
    generously acknowledge, as Edgar doesn't, that his inspirations
    have mostly come from collaborators and muses (whom he was known
    to badly mistreat). At no point do I get the impression the
    director has all the answers in _In Praise of Love_.

    The stunning final third of the film perhaps hints at the way
    forward: an exalted, intense, new way to look, live, love, create art.
    The scenic Brittany beaches, rocks, and sail boats are photographed
    like impressionism in motion, and echo Monet's colorful paintings
    sketched in Brittany. The superpositions of the back of Edgar's
    head with digital landscapes become surrealist portraits, Dali
    and Miro. The use of mostly static cameras underscores the oil
    painting analogy. Godard eschews the video camera's mobility and
    mounts it exactly the same static way as in the B&W scenes. The
    exceptions are the car sequence, where street lamps and neon
    signs blur like halos in van Gogh's "Starry Night."

    What part does he has in mind for the contrarian Berthe? Is it
    Eglantine, played by the striking Audrey Klebaner? (For such a
    Proustian name, the literary references seem to be all Anglo-Saxon,
    _Canterbury Tales_ and so on.) Or is it a female Perceval, the
    quixotic knight who seeks the Holy Grail? Guinevere, Morgan, Merlin?
    Godard names check Bresson, who made _Lancelot of the Lake_, so it
    is hard to avoid the Arthurian legend. The film also has a copy
    of _Situations_ by that other questing knight (Sartre) in prominent
    display. Perhaps that is meant to say (bearing in mind I am hardly
    a Godard specialist) that the film has found adulthood after all? It
    is no state of grace, an immovable legend, but is a freedom to which
    the artist is condemned, an inevitable quicksand patch of indecision,
    regrets, haunted memories. Even if the adult artist happens to be
    the genius whose _In Praise of Love_ has changed the way we watch
    movies, the way we live.

    (for A.)

    *My two favorite cities in Northern America are Manhattan and
    Montreal. Almost every street corner in Montreal Old Town has
    plaques and statues that celebrate its 400 year evolution; two
    History Musuems compete for visitors side-by-side. New York,
    which has almost as rich a past, seems too busy remaking itself
    to bother. Objectively, Godard's observation certainly passes
    the eye test.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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