The Birds [1963)

Death from above.  That is the key to this movie.  But it is only one key.  It unlocks one very important door, but others remain locked.

I credit Jean-Luc Godard with finding this key.  In Histoire(s) du cinéma Godard draws a visual analogy between Hitchcock’s birds and WWII bombers.  This is the key which unlocks a very important part of the mise-en-scène.  The scene Godard chooses is that of the children running from the school.  Hitchcock was in his early 40s when the London Blitz raged on for 37 weeks.  At one point the capital was bombed for 57 straight nights.

But Hitchcock was not in London.  In March of 1939 he was signed to a seven year contract by David O. Selznick and the Hitchcocks relocated to Hollywood.  In April of the same year his film Rebecca was released.  It would be Hitchcock’s most lauded film till his canonization by the French New Wave.  Rebecca won, among other awards, the Oscar for Best Picture (then known as Outstanding Production).  The story was by Daphne du Maurier (whose novelette “The Birds” would form the basis for the film in question).

Foreign Correspondent would be released not long before The Blitz began (Mr. & Mrs. Smith at its height).  By the time Suspicion was released later in the year (1941), The Blitz had been over for some months.

So what?  The story was by du Maurier and Hitchcock was a successful filmmaker in Hollywood during The Blitz.  The answer is mise-en-scène.  Only a boy from London (Leytonstone, Essex) could have made birds so terrifying.  Perhaps.  We must remember that the Allied bombing of Hamburg (to use just one example) killed (in one raid) about 42,000 Germans:  approximately the same number killed over the entire 37 weeks of The Blitz.

To further stray…how would a resident of present-day Baghdad handle the filming of The Birds?  Or a citizen of northwestern Pakistan?  Or a civilian in modern Afghanistan?

To be sure, this is a horror film.  It is the only Hitchcock film I have seen which approaches the archetypal status (in that genre) of Psycho.  Hitchcock made a career of suspense–of thrillers.  The Birds is sheer terror.

Unlike many of the horror films by lesser directors which followed in the decades to come, The Birds succeeds is being both creepy and artful.  This tenuous balance is perhaps best epitomized in the scene where Tippi Hedren smokes a cigarette on the bench in front of the playground.  In a film with no proper soundtrack (save for the squawks and warbles of Oskar Sala’s Mixtur-Trautonium), it is the children’s voices singing “Risseldy Rosseldy” in the background which makes this scene both so spooky and so timeless.  Composer Mauricio Kagel would employ a similar effect (the use of children’s voices) in his haunting composition entitled 1898 (from 1973).

As an added irony, the special effects shots of the murderous birds were achieved through the indispensable help of Walt Disney Studios.  Indeed, it’s a small world after all.  And that, in some strange way, might answer the most pressing question of all:  why?

 

-PD

 

Rear Window [1954)

Before there was Facebook, there was Rear Window.  It was (and remains) Alfred Hitchcock’s most perfect film.  In it we find “the gaze”…that phenomenon of lovers transposed to the art of memory, which is to say, cinema.

The telephoto lens of our protagonist is fitted to a camera, but he snaps no pictures during the entirety of our film.  Nor does he film what he sees onto reels to later exploit the phi phenomenon. His gaze leads directly to his mind…and the events he witnesses are recorded into his memory.

Rear Window is really a film about film–self-referential cinema.  It is no wonder that Jean-Luc Godard chose to feature images of Jimmy Stewart with the long lens in his magnum opus Histoire(s) du cinéma.  Rear Window is pure cinema.

The further significance is that Stewart’s character L.B. Jeffries embodies the conscience of Hollywood.  Indeed, in this case we are the ones watching the watcher (to paraphrase Juvenal).  But the essential detail is that Jeffries is making a movie in his head…and we are watching him make it.  It is documentary.  He is a news photographer who is laid up in a wheelchair during a summer heat wave because he had gotten a little too cavalier on assignment from his magazine.  But the true artist never stops working.

We enter the realm of Flaherty and the murky waters of fiction vs. reality–staged spectacle vs. actualités.  This is a film about the pure process of motion pictures.  The saving grace (other than the breathtaking Grace Kelly) is that the story is as airtight as an alibi.  Rear Window is endlessly watchable because of this marriage between the abstract (which may, in many cases, be “felt” only intuitively) and the spectacular. 

Before Facebook, there were rear windows.  After Facebook, there will remain Rear Window.

 

-PD

Diamonds Are Forever [1971)

Goodbye Connery.  Barring an unlikely return to the character after the age of 84, this would seem to be the last of the Eon Productions’ series of Bond films to feature the original actor.  I am holding out hope that Connery will team up with fellow octogenarian Jean-Luc Godard and make the 007 picture to end all 007 pictures.  No doubt, it would be a disjointed masterpiece and would deflate the mythical secret agent that Connery grew so tired of playing.  But I’m not holding my breath on the odds.

What we do have is a brilliant movie.  While it’s true that Connery would once more act as Bond in Never Say Never Again, his run in the canon in some ways ends here.  I, for one, think he left on a truly high note.

Jill St. John and Lana Wood are both gorgeous in this film.  Kudos to casting 🙂

Willard Whyte (a thinly-veiled depiction of Howard Hughes) was actually made possible by Mr. Hughes himself.  Howard was friends with producer Albert Broccoli.  Hughes’ pull certainly came in handy for the location-filming in Vegas.

Speaking of pull…Sidney (the socks make the man) Korshak has his imprint on this film in several ways.  I would imagine his assistance in Las Vegas was immeasurable.  He also just so happened to represent St. John.  What luck! 😉

Some viewers might give pause (variously) at the first appearance of Plenty O’Toole (Wood).  She does make quite a splash.

Guy Hamilton did another fine job as director (previously doing Goldfinger in the series).  Seems Hrundi V. Bakshi was “on set” during the oil rig scene.  And though the explosives went off prematurely, there were a couple of cameras rolling. (whew)

How can one object to a film that basically starts with the actual Miss World 1953 being strangled topless with her own bikini?  Yes, it was a “bit part” for Denise Perrier, but pithy.  Pity about the PG version.

Students of architecture will appreciate the Slumber Mortuary with its lozenge-shaped stained-glass window.  Good taste is timeless.

And phooey regarding continuity!  Car on two wheels passenger side entering the alley?  Car on two wheels driver’s side exiting the alley?  That is the mystery of cinema.  Throw in some jump-cuts and you have Breathless. 🙂

 

-PD

 

 

Histoire)s[ du cinema 1b

Mary Meerson.  Monika Tegelaar.  John Cassavetes.  Glauber Rocha.  These are the dedicatees in the first two parts of Godard’s eight-part pièce de résistanceThe first, a personage from the Diaghilev days of Paris (and inextricable from the Cinémathèque Française).  The second, a two-time film producer who helped Raoul Ruiz conjure an ersatz Patagonia in 1982.  And the third?  And fourth?  It may be advisable that you stop reading now if those two names mean nothing to you.  But if you are brave and push on, I salute you.  The name Cassavetes I had heard in my youth.  For all I knew, he might as well have been a plumber of some renown.  Glauber Rocha I am still grappling with (even his very existence…not to mention his films).

Jean-Luc Godard begins each of his film’s chapters (and sub-chapters) with two such dedications.  These four names symbolize Histoire(s) du cinéma as a whole.  If the reference is too obscure, go look it up.  The auteur dares us to immerse ourselves in the details which has made his own inner life of 84 years so rich.  As a “reward,” he will also bless us along the way with references so obvious as to require no research whatsoever…Snow White and The Seven Dwarfs, for instance.

Everything, no matter how high or low (culturally), which has passed through cinema has been marked by that experience.  Some forget that Sympathy For The Devil (1968, the film) was directed by Godard (and originally to have been called One Plus One).  It has been said that he would have preferred working with The Beatles, but The Rolling Stones figure definitively into the oeuvre of JLG.  Godard was not even above comparing himself to Bob Dylan (in the 60s and beyond).  Beatles, Stones, Dylan…these are not the talismans of a haughty Swiss intellectual.  But Godard never ceases to amaze.  It is like waking up and having your morning coffee served nonchalantly by Méret Oppenheim in a fur-covered cup…and saucer…and spoon.  Fur.  All of them.  Bonjour 🙂

“Someone whispering in my room/I shut off the TV/but the whispering continues.”  It is Der müde Tod, tired of playing his role.  Dead voices gather here in my room.  The window has been painted into place, but it wasn’t completely closed…and so the wind whistles in through the crack all night long…and my ancestors come and go.

Prison (1949).  Ingmar Berman, not to be confused with Ingrid Bergman.  So many names floating around in Jean-Luc’s head.  Eighty-four years on the planet (68 at the time of Histoire(s)‘ completion in ’98).  Numbers.  Joyce toiling for 17 years–the Irishman in Paris.  And Godard for 10–the boy from Paris now in his golden years…in Rolle, la Suisse.  Histoire(s) du cinéma might as well have been written in Romansh (that obscure, little-spoken, fourth official language of Switzerland)…or Welsh…or Basque.

Who is it we see struggling to claw her way up the hill?  Jennifer Jones?  And from what film?  It is not only the language (Godard whispering in French with his Swiss accent…as he has since at least 2 ou 3 choses que je sais d’elle (1967)…all of the many text elements which fill the screen during Histoire(s)‘ 266 minutes), but the film language–the endless references, the fragments of Bartok and Hindemith, the fine-art interpolated between Hollywood vacuities, actualités, realities…reels and reels of the “real”…and the wordplay so beloved by not only Joyce, but Hitchcock.  All of these must be navigated and deciphered to have any chance of finding one’s bearings in the constant referential stream of Histoire(s).

Sex and death.  I am reminded of Oliver Stone’s The Doors (1991).  Jim Morrison is in film school at UCLA and his class project is premiered in front of his classmates and professor.  The film is ridiculous.  It is the stuff of young filmmakers, but it is primal…visceral.

Hollywood is nothing more than sex and death itself.  Always has been.  But Hollywood has, with its glitz and glamour, attracted some of the greatest modern literary minds to shroud the obvious with novel fabric.  The world has been in thrall subliminally since the earliest days of Los Angeles’ long reign.

Jean-Luc found “a keeper” in a fellow filmmaker.  Anna Karina.  Anne Wiazemsky.  And, finally, Anne-Marie Miéville.  I spoke with Anne-Marie on the phone one morning several months ago.  She is a graceful, patient woman.  She is not, at heart, an actress.  She is a genius.

“neither an art, nor a technique/a mystery”…  I do not care about capitalization (nor care much for capitalism).  i will be here in the corner with e.e. cummings.  Strunk and White must take a backseat to Auguste and Louis.  You who obsess over MLA, tell me off the top of your head the meaning of SNCF.  If you cannot, please sit back down.

Were there no rules meant to be broken?  We debate the pros and cons of prose and Cannes.  Tabu:  a story of the southern states…Texas, where to adore Godard is to seem Martian.  I am supposed to think of B.B. King.  If I am an exotic pervert, perhaps Brigitte Bardot.  But Bertolt Brecht?  In Texas the name itself is enough to create a distancing effect (and a generally stupefied look of ignorance).  That is ok.  We are the utopia of Germans and Japanese (to pick randomly):  we are the “wild west.”  John Ford, Rio Bravo, Johnny Guitar…indeed, Joan Crawford was born in my hometown (from which I am writing) San Antonio.

Auguste and Louis.  Lumière.  Light.  Camera.  Act.  I on the other hand have no such appropriate name.  Am I at the edge of the ether (Etheredge)?  Am I truly so reckless as to wish for death?  Depressed?  [I will at this point indulge in a sort of literary sit-in which shall allow me to savor my transgressions as per “writing about film.”]  Ahhh…much better.  I feel refreshed.  And now, on with the show!

There has always been a master/slave relationship in cinema.  The two brothers.  Two reels.  One taking up the slack, the other spooling out.  I know the terminology from sound recording…24-track 2″ tape machines.  SMPTE for the devil (Grasshopper, Mercury Rev).  Please tell me, won’t you?  Which reel is Hegel and which is Nietzsche?  Which Heidegger and which Sartre?  Baudelaire and Baudrillard?  Degas and Debord.

If Méliès (the magician) is fictional, then les fréres Lumiéres are documentary.  But what, then, is Flaherty?  What is a documentary when the characters are directed rather than documented?  Consider Louisiana Story (1948) for instance.  Would Buster Keaton laugh at this oxymoronic method or remain stone-faced (leaving us to laugh, or cry…in turn)?

Consider Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg.  I am Spartacus.  No, I am Spartacus.  If we are all Spartacus, then not one of us can be singled out.  They will have to kill us all.  But Karl and Rosa were indeed murdered.

Master…slave…Spartacus.  It is the same old story:  opposition to imperialist wars.  Oh!, imperialism.  You did not disappear when the sun first set upon the British Empire, did you?  No.  Nor did you cease to exist in the 60s when African countries like Algeria were finally able to assert themselves.  There are still busy bees toiling away for imperialists…drones for corporatists.

Without a future.  Johnny Guitar.  Johnny Rotten.  Prison.  “good, he said/night, she said”…Dziga Vertov…Ukrainian for “spinning top”…that man with the movie camera…the devil, probably.

“the whispering/which the man had already perceived”…it begins again.  That lady from Shanghai–an exterminating angel…a femme fatale…Augie and Lou record the arriving train; the workers leaving the factory.  Godard reminds us that a film projector is obligated to the “memory” of the camera.  There is an occasional optimism in Jean-Luc’s philosophy which at times pierces the clouds like the sun at high noon.  L’Espoir.  “…cinema is not an industry/of evasion/because it is…”…what?  “the only place/where memory is slave”…  But don’t take my word for it…a Texan trying to translate French.  Head on down to Barnes & Noble and pick up an English version of Histoire(s) du cinéma.  Just be advised that there isn’t one.

The shadow of a doubt.  You are incredulous.  The law of silence.  You reserve the right to later prove me wrong.  I welcome the day when an English translation of Histoire(s) du cinéma exists.  We human beasts–les Fauves…we live life by the drop…by the dram.  L’Assommoir.  dram…drachm…Dracula.

Godard’s “family album” includes Zola, Proust, Manet.  Is it false to graph a fauxtograph?  Niépce, Daguerre…yes, camera photography indeed originated in France (in the 1820s) and the first known photograph of a person (made by Daguerre) dates from 1838 (in Paris, naturally).  But perhaps the most ironic omission from Histoire(s) du cinéma is Louis Le Prince (ironic at least in that, though he is “remembered” for pioneering moving pictures by way of scenes he shot in the U.K., he was thoroughly French).

But though there is no mention of Le Prince, there are other sorts of pioneers…such as Giotto and Matisse…even Madame de la Fayette and (due to Sartre?) Faulkner.  It is well-known that Sartre was Godard’s intellectual hero.  La Fayette was friends with Cardinal de Retz during the Fronde as well as being close with La Rochefoucauld.  She authored La Princesse de Clèves (1678).  Sarkozy may no longer see exceptional value in this groundbreaking French novel, but leave it to Godard to once again be oracular in predicting (somewhat) the 2009 French protests which consisted of anti-Sarkozy public readings of France’s first historical novel (and quite possibly the first “psychological” novel in the history of world literature).  But Godard was not pulling from thin air:  he knew his history (and had lived it).  Jean Cocteau had adapted the novel for a 1961 film version directed by Jean Delannoy.

Godard with his mind like a TGV.  He is the eternal skeptic…skeptical of cinema as much as Christianity.  JLG the TGV is not one who can be forced to believe.  His mind is too far ahead.  Our avant-garde.  And his mind races backwards through time…back to Bergson…Meerson…and avec grande vitesse towards our present destination…Watson and Crick…Manson and “Tricky Dick”…fat…gift…poison…mist…shit

Louis Le Prince or no Louis Le Prince:  in the beginning was the word.  Ordet.  Danish for “word.”  But as Godard pays homage to Dreyer (director of Ordet in 1955) he drops into German for some reason…and as e.e. cummings…capitalizing (on) nothing:  “wie zu einer anderen historischen nachricht” [as to another historical message].

The eye is sliced again and again throughout the course of Histoire(s) du cinéma (just as the digital razor blade is applied in ever more inventive ways in Godard’s editing laboratory).  “eine ganz andere stelle in deinem leben einnehmen” [an entirely different spot to take in your life]  The Image, it has been said, will appear at the time of the resurrection.  Girls in tears.  “The cinema was never an art and, still less, a technique,” says Godard.  Le Repas de bébé (1895), directed by Louis Lumière, keeps the girl from crying.  Rio Bravo keeps the Frenchman dreaming.  Motion picture cameras never fundamentally changed between ca. 1895 and 1959 (the year of Howard Hawks’ Rio Bravo).  Godard educates us to this fact while going on to extol the virtues of the Debrie 7 (a cine camera from the 1920s) at the expense of the Panavision Platinum (1986, which would have been the latest Panavision model when Godard was filming Chapitre 1b of Histoire(s)).

Old is better?  Perhaps.  But at the very least, one must know one’s history–the history of their art.  [not an art/nor a technique/but a mystery]  Why do some things “work” in art while others don’t?  That is the mystery of art.  For Godard, cinema is beyond art:  it is a complete mystery.  That is having respect for one’s medium.  That is a humility beyond self-criticism.  I am reminded of Le Gai savoir (1969).  Cinema year zero.

Gide.  Guide.  White shadows, south seas.  Black shadows, north sea.  Kiss me, Captain Blood…you stupid, ordinary fascist.  Madame Bovary.  Adam Ovary.  Before there was porn, there was Bovary.  The Devil.  Cinema is an art without a future.  Godard the pessimist is as splenetic as Baudelaire–as sardonic as Céline.  As Godard was filming Chapter 1 of Histoire(s) it had still not even been 100 years since L’Arrivée d’un Train en gare de la Ciotat (1895)…that canonical cornerstone of film history (directed by the Lumière brothers).

Godard takes another stab at one of his employers (this time specifying the Léon of Gaumont) while again viciously eviscerating the vitiating effect of television upon society in general.  Gaumont’s TV dream was indeed essentially a dark victory.  The sky (indeed, heaven) has been brought down to the level of a midget (“du petit Poucet“…from Perrault, 1697) by way of television [argues Godard].

The “Geneva drive” or “Maltese cross” in movie projectors (the mechanizing principle having originated in the Swiss watch industry) allows each frame of film to pause before the projection lamp for 1/24th of a second.  In that 24th of a second, each frame is twice exposed (creating a frequency of 48 Hz).  The mechanism was still being used (for other purposes) as late as 2007 for NASA’s Dawn mission.  “ce désir mort…”  I cannot explain Godard.  I can only follow leads.  And there are so many of them in Histoire(s)…from Marguerite Duras to Jeanne Moreau.

I read “baron Enfantin” and arrive at Dimitri Kirsanoff by way of Ménilmontant (1926).  It is a silky smooth road of mental glissandi…so very similar to Finnegans Wake.  Godard may be talking about “the dream” being mechanized, but my mind is drunk on rhum–dancing a rhumba.  Is it but a bitter victory to “figure out” what Godard is getting at in Histoire(s)?  …that is to say, the birth of art?  ice floe…sloe gin…  It was the dawning of the 20th century when hysteria began to be treated by the young Freud…”les portes du rêve“…the key to dreams…the key to these doors…Charcot meets Lilian Gish…neurology, psychology, psychiatry…nothing…never…Salpêtrière…  Cinema would not catch up to Godard’s thoughts ca. 1988 until 2012 when Alice Winocour decided to make a film about Charcot and his love affair with a patient (Augustine).

God.  The gods.  gods~~~  the state of infancy was perverted by the World Wars…and sad television…poor, pitiful television of imbecile adults…”which refuses to see the hole from which it was born”…television, personified, itself an adult imbecile…

All of this is, for Godard, wrapped up in the splendor and misery of cinema.  Hitler.  Cinema.  “the techniques have been decided upon for the reproduction of life”…by way of cinema…in the morning of the 20th century.

“she said neither yes nor no”~~~a girl and boy

When will life be given back what cinema has stolen from it?  When will life take it back?  From the beginning, it was decided (for some reason) that the standard would be black and white.  But life is not black and white.  These are “the colors of mourning,” says Godard.  What do Chaplin and the poets have to say about this situation?  If they sing gravely, they still consider all mortals to be their brothers.  Even Edison filmed May Irwin in The Kiss (1896).  And it is simply that:  a kiss.  Was it the first kiss ever filmed?  Perhaps an earlier kiss will be unearthed 😉  One thing is certain:  for its time it was positively scandalous.  Improper.  Quasi-pornographic.  Edison showed the 47 second film in Ottawa and it was long thought to be the first film ever shown in Canada.  Turns out the Lumière brothers had been in Montreal about a month before.  the angel…Gauguin…recapitulation.  “to be a poet in times of distress is to sing, to be attentive to the trace of the gods who have fled”~~~What are we (not to mention, Where do we come from?)?  And, by the way, Where are we going?

She has jumped into San Francisco Bay.  It is nighttime for the world.  And the poet?

-PD

À Suivre

Histoire)s[ du cinema 1a

Jean-Luc Godard has always been one to break the rules, but his personality is one of paradoxes.  In his later years he has embraced what might be called humanism–specifically steeped in the art, literature and music of the Western world.  And thus the fact that his most brilliant, exprimental film is likewise a book (with a life of its own) published by Gallimard (arguably the most prestigious house in France…printers and tastemakers of the canonical) makes perfect sense in the upside-down world of history’s most consistently idiosyncratic auteur.

Originally published in 1998, the book is a joint venture with Gaumont.  At age 68 Godard had gone from enfant terrible of the May ’68 Parisian riots to fulfilling a lifelong ambition to be not just an auteur, but an author.  In André Malraux’s 1937 novel L’Espoir, the Negus explains to Puig that the Republicans fighting for democracy in Spain had not yet come to fully appreciate the gravity of their situation.  It is with a reference to Man’s Hope (L’Espoir) that Godard begins his masterwork Histoire(s) du cinéma.  History is a fight.  The history of the world is the history of its battles.  There has been, and will always be, a war on between competing histories.

“Films have never given back to life that which they have stolen,” Godard tells us.  Cinema has told a history (une histoire seule) of the world…one of many versions:  a story.  We always hear about “the Hollywood version,” that proverbial method of accounting for facts which often involves changing essential details and providing “happy endings” where there originally were none.  For Godard, the movie industry (taken in its totality) has failed humanity.  Even when Hollywood attempts to remember, it cannot for some reason.  And forgetfulness is equal to murder–at least in the eyes of Godard.  Why is Schindler’s List actually an exercise in forgetting rather than remembering?  Is it that the director (Spielberg) cannot help but apply elements of “the Hollywood version” mentality even to such a grave subject as the Holocaust?  Godard seems to indicate as much right from the first paragraph of his film-tome.

What is Godard getting at?  His intricate argument has even earned him the label anti-Semite, but is this really fair?  It seems that even at age 84 Monsieur Godard continues to be misunderstood.  Perhaps he only wants the Holocaust to be remembered by way of “real tears and real blood.”  One might hear the influence of Rossellini in these words which echo the ethos of Roma città aperta (1945) and other neorealist Italian films of the postwar years.  Perhaps it is not possible to cinematically capture the horror of the Nazi extermination camps seeing as how no footage exists (or has it merely not been made public?) of the camps while in operation.  We only have footage of their “liberation”–and that at the hands of Hollywood (by way of George Stevens…courtesy of the U.S. Army).  By 1951 Stevens was back to directing Elizabeth Taylor in A Place In The Sun (herself having starred in National Velvet in 1944, at the height of the war).

Godard does not single out Stevens as being artistically impotent.  In the spirit of self-criticism, he faults the whole of world cinema (almost without exception).  It is not just Los Angeles (Hollywood) which is to blame for propaganda, nor simply Moscow, but even Paris itself (epicenter of la nouvelle vague).  It is not just Frank Capra (himself also hired by the U.S. War Department like Stevens…in Capra’s case to literally make propaganda films prior to the war’s end) who is to blame, but also Jean Renoir (a key figure in Godard’s personal pantheon of film heroes).  Directors whose job is to direct “fiction” have been “incapable of controlling the vengeance” which life now demands:  real tears and real blood.

When Jean-Paul and Anna kissed in Pierrot le fou as they leaned from their cars pulled up aside one another, we were seeing Godard in a more naïve period of his career (yet one in which he was beginning to struggle with the fundamental deficiencies of cinema as it then existed in 1965).  That film marks a relatively early foray for him into surrealism which he would return to with more venom in Week-end (1967).  By then, Godard was claiming the “end of cinema” along with the Fin of finality which would prove to be a penultimate prophecy from cinema’s one true oracle.  By 1968, Paris was in flames and Godard had essentially left what little area of the mainstream he had carved out by way of earlier productions such as Le Mépris (1963).  There would be no more films with Brigitte Bardot.  Godard jumped headlong into a fight not unlike that of the Spanish Republicans…and perhaps he could not foresee what a pitched battle it would be.

Indeed, it is possible that Godard sees himself not unlike L.B. Jeffries in Hitchcock’s Rear Window:  simply a technician, a professional…curiosity and a telephoto lens.  Whatever the case may be, Godard became a decidedly political filmmaker from at least 1967 onwards.  It was not until the 1980s that he began to emerge from this single-minded politique to begin embracing a more mature, yet no less eccentrically passionate, form of filmmaking.

No doubt:  a crime had been committed.  Like Jimmy Stewart at his window, Godard has taken it all in for huitante-quatre years (not quatre-vingt-quatre, for Godard is decidedly Swiss).  World War II was, and continues to be, the defining time of Godard’s life.  From ages 9 to 15, he was an impressionable youth living mainly in Switzerland and observing the war with, to say the least, curiosity.  What would happen?  Would all of Europe soon be German?  It certainly looked that way for awhile.

By 1953, the world was starting to forget in earnest.  The shock of World War II was soothed by Hollywood.  It was the year of Vincente Minnelli’s The Band Wagon starring Fred Astaire and Cyd Charisse.  The influence of such films on a then 23-year-old Godard is obvious in, if none other of his films, Une femme est une femme (1961).  But much closer to his heart were the works of Alfred Hitchcock (such as 1959’s North by Northwest).  Add to that the influence of much earlier films by Dziga-Vertov (the Soviet director who was arguably at his artistic peak between 1924 and 1934) and you have some of the many filmic ideas which were surely floating around in Jean-Luc’s head…ready to be synthesized and rearranged beginning with Godard’s first feature film À bout de souffle (1960).

In Histoire(s) du cinéma Godard is taking stock (no pun intended).  His film is the culmination of the 20th century:  the century of film.  Just as J.S. Bach neatly tied up all of the fascinating loose-ends from the Baroque period (and pre-Baroque) with his masterful “golden braids,” Godard determined to give perspective to a century’s-worth of movie attempts in the form of a film essay which is absolutely unrelenting in its criticism of “the seventh art.”  Hegel codified les six and Canudo la settima.  An industry, yes, but also an art–the art.  It was, and remains, the art of arts.  Where sculpture, painting, dance, music and poetry are woven together by way of a curious architecture:  a place both spatial and temporal.

From Fitzgerald’s “last tycoon” Irving Thalberg to Welles’ subject in F for Fake (and an inspiration for the protagonist in Citizen Kane) Howard Hughes, the film industry has seen its share of “gods among men.”  And yet both of these gods were impotent each in their own ways.  Thalberg was no doubt a true “idea man” of film, yet he was as “fragile” as he was fecund.  Hughes, the courageous and rich multi-industry baron who was yet in thrall to his RKO starlets eventually succumbed to a reclusiveness worthy of Salinger.  The power of Hollywood has always contained within it a powerless human-element–a formulaic tendency dictated by fealty to that double-edged sword:  the bottom line.

Godard and Truffaut (among other French New Wave filmmakers) would turn this formula on its head.  They took the predictable plot schemes of B-movies and inflated them with a fulminating absurdity from the inside until the forms exploded.  One of Godard’s most quotable and enduring utterances over the years has been, “A film is a girl and a gun.”  In the hands of the erudite Godard (himself a disciple of Sartre), this “rule” was transgressed all the more deliciously in that Jean-Luc recognized it and deconstructed it.  The results in his early films were devastatingly beautiful.

Hollywood has always been for the masses.  It is truly the backbone of “the society of the spectacle.”  And thus for “a nickel,” the world would come alive in the hands of early pioneers like Griffith.  The spectacle of Intolerance (1916) was a riposte to earlier Italian epic films such as Cabiria (1914).  Hollywood cranked out dreams as if from a factory and, as Godard points out in Histoire(s), a factory not unlike those of communism.  Ars Gratia Artis (art for art’s sake) reads the MGM logo.  No doubt, among the vapid diversions there were true pieces of art.  New York’s Museum of Modern Art was incredulous when Henri Langlois (founder of the Cinémathèque Française) proclaimed, upon its release, that Only Angels Have Wings (1939) was a masterpiece.  Langlois would be proven correct…not least due to the success of his disciples Godard, Truffaut, Chabrol, Rohmer, Rivette, etc.   Indeed, its director (Howard Hawks) would become a key influence upon the French New Wave.

But is it not ironic that the producer of Hawks’ early masterpiece was also the producer of Citizen Kane (a film based in part upon himself…and not at all flatteringly)?  Those are the twisted roots of Hollywood.  Hughes of TWA, of Hughes Aircraft, of Project Azorian (not Jennifer, as it is sometimes known) in conjunction with the C.I.A., of RKO…like Daniel Defoe, owner of civet cats (entrepreneurial perfumer), secret agent for William III, trader of wine to Portugal, tax assessor (specifically taxes on glass bottles), proprietor of a tile and brick factory, nonconformist (Nonconformist?), social/economic/political activist, satirist, Tory intelligence agent, “modern” journalist, Whig intelligence agent, false-flag pamphleteer (covert propagandist), chronicler of the supernatural (ghosts), propagandist and spy due to financial debt, spy in Edinburgh, agent for political union and the consolidation of power for state economic gain.  Corn, excise taxes…it was among such concerns that this widely published and now notorious liar, travel essayist, occasionally honest, candid, and (finally, at age 59) brilliant author of Robinson Crusoe (1719) operated.

Howard Hawks’ film His Girl Friday (1940) would not be titled thusly were it not for Defoe’s character Man Friday.  And Godard would not have mentioned Defoe and Robinson (as he had Malraux’s Puig and the Negus) had he not grasped the allegorical reading(s) of the 1719 novel.  Western civilization (Spengler be damned…) continued its “development” (<—…but not discounted) in the Twentieth Century by way of film–from Hawks and Hitchcock to Godard, Cassavetes and Brakhage.  The economic tyranny of the “bottom line” has put undue pressure on filmmakers to be craftsmen at the expense of true artistry.  Yet, artistry has been rewarded on occasion…even as far back as Chaplin and the formation of United Artists (also taking into account the economic individualism of Fairbanks, Pickford and Griffith) in 1919 [UA was initially an anti-company…a response to bigger, more tyrannical business concerns].

But there is a heart beating in this darkness…a heart of colonial desires…the impetus in the marrow of Howard Hughes’ bones:  the desire to write one’s name everywhere (“partout”).  Perhaps what Godard takes most from Defoe is the spirit of repentance (again with the self-criticism…not unusual for a filmmaker who began his film life as a film critic for Cahiers du cinéma, etc.).  Godard is not apologizing for cinema’s refusal or impotence to stop the Holocaust (this is really what is at issue throughout this 266 minute work), but is rather railing against the hollowness of Hollywood’s priorities…starlets not as faded flowers, but rather as rotten meat.

It might be said that Robinson Crusoe is the first English-language novel.  Whatever negative can be said of Histoire(s) du cinéma, it likewise seems to be sui generis.  And if Robinson can be said to have finally triumphed in the series of his adventures (because death never came for him), the same perhaps cannot be said of Howard Hughes.  Death wouldn’t come.  Did the sickly recluse’s life drag on past its usefulness?  Has the cinema pioneered by Thalberg and Hughes (among many others) outlived its usefulness?  Was 1967 truly the end of cinema?

Death is the author…the grand auteur.  “…and death/like Daniel Defoe/did not dare/to kill Robinson.”  The ever-cryptic Godard is positively Joycean both in the film and book versions of Histoire(s).  Franchises, sequels, product tie-ins…  Of all the films never made, was there one which would have “killed” cinema?  Is the movie industry merely a bloated corpse waiting to be punctured and drained of its useless substance?

It is now television which predominates.  The name Jean Renoir is on no one’s lips.  His father, the painter Pierre-August, is only slightly more remembered in this society of forgetting.  We watch TV to forget.  We once went to the movies to escape, to be air-conditioned, to dream in darkened halls, but now…the forgetting is 24/7.  There is no Jean Vigo.  No Jean Cocteau.  No Max Ophüls.  The happiness of television is not joy.  There is no Ozeray to take the stage for a Giraudoux.  Pixar might model a character after Louis Jouvet (in Ratatouille), but a Pixar character can’t quit a few weeks into filming.  It is a voice.  Animated.  Ophüls’ L’école des femmes was never completed.  It was 1940.  Geneva.  Godard was 10 years old.

Molière’s play (L’école des femmes), however, was completed…and first staged in December 1662.  [Was Howard Hughes intimidated by femininity à la Gatsby?]  Molière, for his part, was a bold (yet self-criticizing) character himself.  L’école is almost a Lolita story…a girl brought-up from the age of 4 to the age of 17 by one man (twice her age) whose intent is to have her be faithful due to a purposefully-ingrained ignorance.  It is a play of mistaken identity, a comedy of errors (or tragedy), and a case for Fate. 

Is it not ironic that Godard references Gaumont newsreels from WWII in this book about the impotence of the film industry (a book, no less, co-published by Gaumont itself)?  We see Hitler, Seurat, treason on the radio:  “but cinema keeps its word.”  Fritz Lang tells a real story in M.  No happy ending.  No Lubitsch touch.  Chaplin imitating Hitler imitating Chaplin.  “Radio Paris is German.”

The years rolled by…39-45.  And it was that “simple rectangle”…35mm film, whether Agfa or Ilford, which could have saved “the honor of the real.”  Godard is still fighting that battle today (even if he is working in video, this film for example).  Sure, he is a Spanish Republican at heart, but his trenches are frontline in the war of remembrance (the last soldier, perhaps). Some might wonder with curiosity about this man who doesn’t know the war is over, but for him it is not. He is still holed up in the jungle with a Steenbeck editing table. If any man is an island, it is Godard. He is living empathy.  To forget the dead is to dishonor the dead.  To remember the dead dishonorably is as good as forgetting them.  No, Spielberg is not up to the task…nor Lanzmann.

Most would reckon that Godard has not made a Holocaust film, but he has.  This is it.

During the war years the movie industry was “mute/with its humble and formidable power.”  Why?  In Lang’s Metropolis social justice takes center stage.  There is the curious son who walks a mile in the shoes of the workers who are, each day, buried alive.  There is the angel of protection for the orphans of capitalism.

The battle is fiction vs. reality.  The only real weapons “images et sons”…  Godard would come to respect Nicolas Ray, Samuel Fuller and others who, like Lang, used fiction against itself.  There was a respect for the image.  A respect for sound.  And the little 35mm rectangle, in turn, saved the honor of humanity…if one could let it.  To a certain extent, the director had to “get out of the way.”  And it took true auteurs to walk the tightrope of economic pressure from above (studio heads) and thereby make art (even if given a bad story, scenario, premise, etc.).  The true auteur could transmit a cryptic message like Shostakovich did in his string quartets:  we are alive, I am alive, we are aware, we shall outlast this tyranny.

But the masses want fiction.  The war is over there, not here.  Nothing to see.  Move along.  It’s somebody else’s problem.  From Fantômas to Christ, are they really all myths?  Jesus attending to the crowds.  Films speaking to The Crowd…the lowest common denominator.  The phantom is in the opera.  When we finally see him without his mask, will we be properly horrified?  Is it not much worse that the actor who played The Wizard (in Oz) was a member of Yale’s Skull & Bones fraternity?  It is a rich metaphor.  And completely factual.

Drop your bombs.  Film for BDA:  battlefield damage assessment.  But the Germans of Arriflex, the most technologically advanced nation in Europe:  they filmed nothing at the camps?  Nothing was ever found?  Found, but not released?  Why?  To forget?

The methods are the same today in the fictionally-free U.S.A.  If Wernher von Braun designed it, then was it really Made In U.S.A.?  This is the rhythm of Godard…the cadence.  It is the filmic equivalent of Voyage au bout de la nuit or Mort à credit.  Those three little dots…ellipses, a splitting of the literary atom…to join Mussorgsky and Zola and Partch and Henry Miller in vernacular speech patterns…verismo beyond Leoncavallo or Mascagni.  “People don’t say such things.”  Or rather, people don’t talk like that.  Ridiculous Pagliacci:  singing with a knife in his back.  Lester Townsend.   “La Commedia è finite!” 

The nightly news continues to be The Birth of a Nation.  And the only hope is Rome ville ouverte as Godard writes in translation.  The opera’s opus number works against it.  What if Louis Ferdinand-Céline had been elliptical?  Just as Saul Bass needed Jules Antoine Lissajous to truly express Vertigo in that Hitchcock film’s opening credits, Arnold needed Richter (Arri).  Lightweight cameras.

Godard gives us nightmares and dreams on a screen–a shroud with motives as automatic as a Turin assembly line.  Destouches in Detroit.  Céline in Cameroon.  The shrimp await Glauber Rocha.  20th Century Fox.  Goya.  George C. Scott?  Ingrid Bergman?  William Blake?  Is it a glass bead game or Dorothy about to click her heels?

If you cannot navigate such a foray into absurdity–into a surrealism as black as spring, then you will never ford the fjord which leads to the hall of the mountain king…and you will forever scream.

Unspoken histories.  Histories of the night.  Singin’ in the rain…  Suspicion.  “…it is too late and the army has already fired upon the crowd”…never, Van Gogh, faithful heart.  “Rembrandt and his terrible black and white”…

In this which has been burned, I no longer know what to quote:  and that is the point of Histoire(s) du cinéma. It is sensory overload.  It is Rembrandt superimposed upon Monet.  This is cinema’s answer to Finnegans Wake and Le Sacre du printemps.  Have we forgotten Guernica?  No.  Art remembers.

Who was Valentin Feldman?  Was the first 16mm color film used at Auschwitz and Ravensbrück?  Godard’s steel-trap mind always keeps us on our toes with obscure details he has gleaned over the years.  But one thing is certain:  eyes blind to the final solution brought about a new Germany:  year 0 (zero).

Godard takes issue with American cinema while worshipping it, but one must consider at what age he made this masterwork.  After a life of study, he understands how American cinema “ruined” French cinema and, indeed, all cinema in Europe.  To exactly what cultural colonialism is he referring?  Max Schreck…not the same as Shrek.  Schönberg not the same as Schoenberg.  The last words of Max Linder?  “Help!”

-PD

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