Friday, September 16, 2022

The Other Jean-Luc

I have to admit that Jean-Luc Godard, whose death was announced yesterday, wasn't quite as horrible as the ad-hoc accolades being showered on his name in the hours since. Every periodical and news-gathering service has felt obliged, in purple prose, to eulogize Godard. The tributes might give one some idea of how controversial he was - fifty years ago. In those days, films were thought to be worthy of passionate debate. It was the steep decline of the quality of films in the late '60s that brought an end to it. Truffaut died of a brain tumor in 1984. His death was followed, over the ensuing years, by Chabrol's, Rivette's, and Rohmer's. Godard hung on in Switzerland until his body was so depleted that a doctor was asked to assist him into that glittering movie palace in the sky (it's legal in Switzerland, don't you know). Alas, Godard's influence, the effect he had on film criticism and on cinephilia, will live long after his assisted suicide. His films, however, are so redolent of the Sixties that they will remain a monument to its strident inanities. 

It all started in 1940 with the Fall of France when little Jean-Luc was 9 years old. (François Truffaut was 8, but the two didn't meet until 1948.) What the Nazis did to the French in four years of occupation shouldn't happen to any nation, but it was especially demoralizing for one that had been the mortal enemy of Germany for generations and that had participated, with its Vichy government, in its own occupation. Godard and his family was safe in Switzerland, but as an ethnic-Frenchman he must've been deeply affected by the plight of France. 

Immediately after the liberation in 1944, American film promoters moved into France to reassert Hollywood's hegemony over its film markets. During the Occupation, there had been an embargo on American films, so the reappearance of them on French cinema screens after the war was revelatory to the young men - Godard was 13 and Truffaut 12 - who needed a distraction from postwar conditions, one of which was finding out how best to forget the Occupation. Back in Paris to pursue a university degree in anthropology, Godard joined film clubs where he made the acquaintance of Truffaut and Rohmer. He began to contribute to André Bazin's film journal Cahiers du Cinéma in the early '50s, often locking horns with Bazin's positions. 

Then, in 1954, something terrible happened when Cahiers published an essay by Truffaut called "Une Certaine Tendance du Cinéma Français" ("A Certain Trend of French Cinema"). Just to give you a sampling of Truffaut's critical prowess, he once proclaimed that Jean Renoir never made a bad film. But it's impossible to exaggerate the impact of this single essay and the theory that grew out of it.(1) 

Immediately after its publication, battle lines were drawn. Even Bazin took exception to it. Truffaut and Godard, their heads and dreams filled with Hollywood movies, argued that a director is as much the author, in French auteur, of his work as any novelist or playwright. The problem with their theory was that it was disastrously uncritical. Though the Cahiers critics were especially savage when they considered the French films of the generation of their parents, which they quite transparently labelled cinéma du papa ("daddy's cinema"), they fell over themselves in praise of Hollywood movies. This was a complete inversion of film criticism prior to Cahiers - Hollywood movies weren't taken seriously by critics simply because experience had taught them not to. The works of film art that had appeared intermittently were invariably made somewhere other than Hollywood. 

Another problem with the auteur theory is how indiscriminately it was applied. Not only was Hitchcock an auteur, but so were Howard Hawks (Godard's personal favorite) and Raoul Walsh and William Wellman and Allan Dwan and every other Hollywood director one could name. This was their Achilles Heel. Though it could conceivably be demonstrated that a studio employee like Michael Curtiz was the author of every one of his 181 movies, nobody found it necessary to address the quality of the individual movies or the quality of their author. In other words, Vincente Minnelli became an "author" of equal value to Federico Fellini. Is L. Ron Hubbard an author equal to Saul Bellow? Is Colley Cibber a playwright equal to Shakespeare? 

Godard was a perfect example of the theory - he was the guiding force behind all of his films, their true author. But one more giant flaw in the theory is the notion that every film an auteur makes is worthy of attention. This is one reason why, in the popular imagination, Stanley Kubrick, whose work suffered a falling off in the mid-1960s and kept on falling to the bitter end, made nothing but masterpieces. 

Godard never stopped stirring the shit, but sometime during the Vietnam War audiences stopped noticing. The world has shrunk immeasurably since March 16, 1960, the day a film called Breathless - or Á bout du souffle - opened in Paris. It doesn’t matter any more if the only films of Godard's that are worth bothering about, even conditionally, were made 60 years ago, and I'm thankful for that. But Godard was a kind of art film Tarantino - clever but ultimately half-witted. One of his more coherent quotes sounds just like Tarantino: "I know nothing of life except through the cinema." It wasn't Breathless or Le petit soldat or Bande a part that we remember, but the fact that the stir the individual films created for about a decade was caused by cinema. That doesn't happen any more and will never happen again. 


(1) Auteurists often argue it wasn't a theory.

6 comments:

  1. The image of the French intellectual in my country -US-
    has, I suppose, never recovered from the Jerry Lewis debacle
    (NOT that it took place over here-who among US considered him a genius). Yet I decided to watch a Godard movie (rest in peace, buddy) because I have that Criterion app. So, in all its glorious Raoul Cougars color, it would be “2 or 3 Things I Know About Her”. “Her”=Marina Vlady.
    Despite greater (but not a heavy) poundage, this leading actress made me think a little of Kate Moss by her face—or maybe she’s as if Verushka and Judy Collins had
    crossbred... Godard absolutely wastes having this altogether-a-little-more-enticing-than-his usual-gal screen presence in his hands. And he makes her utter all kinds of
    pseudophilosophical and contradictory
    banalities, when, altogether presentable,
    she perhaps may’ve been convincing at enacting some genuine storytime drama for us. (She never directly eyes the camera, making her, I guess, a better than average cinema verite actress.)
    But I’d seen his Weekend film, managed to finish a rental copy some yrs ago, and actually laughed at that scene at the end... our bourgeois couple have become cannibals! What a prescient guy(?) I also noticed in that film the presence of now-missing-in-action ‘60s
    Gallic teenybopper Michele Breton, dancing about to the loud beat of a lone drummer... she was later in Performance.
    As for Breathless... well, at least that one has an undeniable energy/vitality for all of its shortcomings.
    I would at least partially disagree with your Kubrick analogy, sheerly on the basis of basic filmic competence. I hated The Shining entirely, and, why,
    yes, Tom Cruise can only be so convincing... but among K’s later films, well, I think that to most audiences the orgy scene in Eyes Wide Shut, hey, even that long lightshow finishing up 2001 can stand as more involving than ANY Godard scene that I’m aware of. (There’s 1 scene in 2 or 3 Things that will, however, involve any man interested in soapy bathing scenes... for all of its 20 seconds.) The apes in 2001 also lead the viewer past a melee and on to a greater point of import. For all of his longeurs, you’ll always have some kind of Kubrickian point being made, probably in every single movie (I’ve yet to see a few) of his.
    Godard-or the mouthpiece characters in his movies-seem to me a sort of Nietzsche of film, just plain never reaching any final conclusion. (Barring Breathless and Weekend, maybe.) His not being very funny most of the time hardly helps either, although I do know that Python took some incidental inspiration when I read out a Vlady line translating as “Not dead
    Yet”....
    The worst thing of all, though, this week, has been seeing the obituarists compare him to that even more hate-consumed filmmaker, Quentin Tarantino. (Semi-brilliant script for True Romance notwithstanding, here’s someone in need of a shoot with Alec Baldwin!) What an honor! So we at least know what kind of audience will be conditioned to remember Jean-Luc.

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    1. With Godard there was always a lot - too much - to "get past." Adrian Brody said he inspired people to make movies in the 60s the way they might join a band. With comparable results he might have added. I think the highest ranking New Wave film in the Sight & Sound polls is Jules and Jim, up past #100! The Godard-Truffaut feud resembled the Sartre-Camus feud. It was political.

      The 2 most interesting things in 2001 are the apes and HAL. The people - the actors - are dull. That's Kubrick. He lost interest in people and concentrated on effects. He's a good example of the unimportance of complete artistic control. He could've made any movie he wanted after 2001. It makes you wonder what crap Orson Welles might have given us if he had total control of the train set in film after film. If he had, maybe Kane would be forgotten by now.

      Critics today don't seem to have a comprehensive or comprehensible frame of reference. Their film educations were spotty. Yet they're the ones being consulted for the Sight Unsound polls.

      I wonder that people in their 20s will ever figure out what Godard was about.

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  2. I’d worried I’d been a little disrespectful of Godard in a memorial notice - and was sure to refer to him as “buddy”. Kauffmann’s asides on Sontag that you’ve just published jolted my memory banks, they were read by me before I knew how hateful she was, although I agree with her (or is the word “empathize”) in her funny use of the word “merely”. Maybe not in that there context, hmph, but I know that word alone did become a huge point of style, later on, and usually much funnier, when used by ‘70s Gonzoish writers like Richard Meltzer. Mere beauty. Like Francois Truffaut. Actually, while I agree Truffaut pretty well started a High Art-ist, I’ve never had any doubt Godard must have been a more interesting bloke (mixing nationalities) to “hang with”. (Jim Morrison - once pictured
    w/ Truffaut on the set of Bed and Board - be damned.) I’ve seen a documentary on when he filmed the Rolling Stones’ “Sympathy for the Devil” and his other May ‘68 involvement, and, yeah, pretentious pronouncements and all, plus seeing the way he interacted with others makes him seem pretty “cool”, I suppose. And I wonder what happened to the rest of that crew (Not just Brian Jones! I mean, of the others, I know only that Ian Quarrier is a bad actor in Polanski’s FVK and that voiceover artist Sean Lynch briefly appears as a scientist in Wonderwall!) He occasionally will make you (ah! that Pauline Kael “you”) laugh in his movies although I guess he hardly ever properly knows how to tell a joke. (That he’s actually Swiss, which I read in the Vernon Young book I acquired after reading your recommendation, seems borne out by the obits.) Plus, his second wife A Wiazemsky wasn’t as ugly as I remembering John Simon falsely claiming! Godard ain’t all bad! And his “sins” pale in comparison to so much of what came later. For one thing, I doubt he ever filmed anything as hateful as what so many subsequent directors, whether Tarantino or Pasolini, specialized in. I also know C.T. Samuels, that last of the highbrows would have been, um, highly
    dismayed to see a claptrap movie like “Day for Night” where we see FT devolve to just another gossip-focused Sofia Coppola or something like it (or a kind of filmic David Thomson).
    I can basically agree about Kubrick’s lack of real interest in people
    -doesn’t the famous prostitute scene in FullMetalJacket portend Tarantino as much as anything? And he’s frequently boring. But not at all times, or at least, not in some individual scenes... I could still maintain that basing a scene in Eyes Wide Shut off the Rothschilds Surrealist Ball (from 1972, even if in CT-territory, let it be maintained that the Internet re-surfacing of these masked party photos are about all the abounding proof one needs of Kubrick’s intent) is more astoundingly purposive anti-bourgeois protesting than Godard did ever conceive. The pacing of that film then goes back to being glacial, in the Antonioni sense where people in America are also bound to have problems with any film of his barring Blow-Up... so K sprinkled some sex in. (Lea Massari automatically made her 30 minutes the sexy, reverberating part of L’Avventura, but she did it sans mask and thong!) It has some romance in it... but then, Tom Cruise is no great actor, and that kind of inability of his to fully step outside of what Hollywood wants (work with our stars!) is emblematic Kubrick. You only get funny scenes in later movies when they involve foreign actors - his scene set to the tune of I Want to Marry a Lighthouse Keeper(?), in Clockwork Orange, is the only thing that made me laugh there. In EWS, the truly hypnotic music can be said to sustain the horror-style mood of the second half. But I do think there was some kind of last stab at art, flawed art - think Kirchner, Egon Schiele - with Eyes Wide Shut. He also captured at least one performance of very much alive - and frightening! - humanity in that of Nicole Kidman’s wife/Alice, although I suppose its better points may not last the whole picture. Inconsistency abounds. ~Phil

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  3. Wiazemsky was Claude Mauriac's daughter and played in Bresson's Balthasar. I didn't think she was ugly. Simon had his peculiar prejudices As for Nicole, our friend David Thomson wrote a book about her I've seen her naked so often it's like she's my ex-wife. She was cast in Kate Winslet's role for The Reader but pulled out because she got pregnant (not during filming, I hope) Godard and Truffaut remind me of Sartre and Camus, friends who also had a falling out. I doubt that Camus ever called Sartre a piece of merde. But I like Truffaut far more than Godard. Sartre was a faithful Commie to the bitter end. The Nobel Prize may be pretty meaningless as an honor, but if I were awarded one, I would accept it with fulsome thanks (the way Camus did). My dim view of contemporary cinema puzzles the editors at Senses of Cinema, who are convinced there are equals of Bergman and Fellini working somewhere in the world. I'm not. There are good films being made, but they're like volcanic islands that rise out of the ocean. Godard outlasted everyone. He even outlasted cinema as he knew it. The few generations of cinephiles who came after him go on and on about Tarkovsky. The next Sight & Sound poll will have 2001 at #1 and at least one Tarkovsky film in the Top 10. My prediction.

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  4. It may be largely due to Kubrick’s basic directorial skill (which it can’t be said ever truly left him) that this take can even exist:
    I really doubt there's been a performance in Legitimate Mainstream (i.e. Not Porn) American Cinema to compete in sexiness with that of Nikki in ‘EWS’… since 1999 when that film got released (unfortunately premature for me to be able to take any cappucino-latte babe to a theatre and see it!), although there’s one Rosamund Pike(sp?) who can certainly compete with all of its scarier aspects (the Troubled Femme) in “Gone Girl”(2014). Sometimes a girl gets popular for a reason…. it’s certainly understandable if you see the first few Julia Roberts movies, whatever (moral) objections can be raised to them, how that lady of ours became a star. As for Nikki the Saucy Aussie, well, I did at some point (from last of the rental stores) see some early Oz flix she was in, I noted that there’d clearly been some plastic surgery done on the tip of her nose before she got on in the States. (What she’s been in since ‘EWS’ ain’t nothin’ to write a book about!)
    I too can wait with bated breath on that S&S poll now, but knowing what I know from accounts of others in my generation... a co-worker at a part-time intake (cleaners) job I had one summer five years ago, she and her gal(!) went to it at THE theatre-in-town-showing-that-ol'-crap and left it even before that fine "light show" I rave about!... this is where I'm really not even sure about Kubrick's rep outlasting that of Godard. The image of Godard really helps, as I indicated, he seems like someone it would have been "cool" to know. If giving him an R'n'R comparison (as opposed to the literary/Nietzsche one), let's say Godard is someone like "Lemmy Kilmister" from Motorhead... kind of an inspirational/motivational figure, but not someone you really want to listen to much (or ever). With the one Godard LOOKS kinda like, of course, being John Lennon. Much different means-to-end scenarios are involved... yet Lemmy, too, could write a purposive lyric (with, in his case, horrible sound!). So Maybe Godard is Yoko Ono?
    I suspect you probably have an interesting take on the sort of modern-day "hipster"/cult scene that's popped around FILM (what's left of it), I couldn't even imagine having an article approved by the tykes over at Senses.... What ultimately alienated me from all that, a thought that there's still some new & valid & important artistic "global community" of an arts scene, it must've been, somewhere about 2004 or so, seeing the praise heaped upon a pure case of nepotism like Sofia Coppola (not to make her an unfair target), y'know, just a real nobody who'd globbed onto a bit of the Kubrick-Antonioni open feel yet only as a mask for real emptiness of thought in her choice of actors (one being a very untalented actress and the other some moderately funny ex-SNL cast member already in too many uber-hip films for his own good).

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  5. I first saw that fantasmagorical light show near the end of 2001 in what must have been '76 or '77. I had gone to see The Cocoanuts in one theater and my sister went to a theater across the street to see 2001. My movie was over in about 70 minutes, so I went to wait in my sister's car for her movie to be over. After sitting there for awhile, I went to the other theater and persuaded the ticket person to let me in to watch the end of 2001. It kills me that people still can't figure out the ending. I never thought much of the idea behind 2001 - the obelisks boosting human evolution at intervals. I mean, Chariots of the Gods! I admire Japan and its books and movies. Sofia Coppolla's film was almost racist, a dumb outsider's look. I used to want to know what Murray whispers to her at the end. Godard was a kind of cool, but Raoul Coutard's amazing b&w photography did all the work for Godard. I sort of liked A Married Woman when I saw it half a life ago. Breathless has its moments (a toothsome Jean Seberg). Paris.

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