Showing posts with label Michel Subor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michel Subor. Show all posts

Monday, December 6, 2010

The Intruder

Claire Denis' The Intruder takes the director's sensual minimalism to its extremity, carving an entire film out of her tactile, elliptical direction at the expense of plot. Based on philosopher Jean-Luc Nancy's autobiographical, post-structuralist essay of the same name, L'Intrus for the most part lacks even the recurring symbols that anchor her other features. The only constants are characters, about whom we learn nearly nothing.

What's impressive about Denis' staging is that L'Intrus still feels remarkably light-footed for its lack of clear-cut narrative. Denis' primary strength as a filmmaker is her ability to frame the human body in inventive and evocative manners, and she filters Nancy's philosophical text through an emotional lens, balancing an intellectualism that matches up with some of her own recurring themes with her most delicate, tantalizing imagery. The result is nothing less than a masterpiece.


L'Intrus opens with a Russian woman offering a précis of the film, solemnly whispering, "Your worst enemies are hiding inside, in the shadow, in your heart" before moving to an unconnected image of a country road, the tranquility of which is interrupted by warning signs and a guard post. We see a customs official search a vehicle traveling from France into Switzerland, beginning the dialectical juxtaposition that defines much of the film's editing. Denis follows the border guard home to her husband and two young children. The husband gently seduces his wife with a story about them making love in the forest before plopping her down on his "branch." Then, Denis abruptly cuts to the forest outside as an old man bathes in a waterfall with his dogs nearby. Idyllic, panoramic views of the man, Louis Trebor (Michel Subor), contrast with shaky, hand-held POV shots of some scarcely seen stalker, particularly when Louis floats in a lake (Denis loves to shoot people floating in water; it makes people so serene, yet so vulnerable).

Then, the old man does some strokes in the lake, and something at last happens. Clearly, he has a heart attack while swimming, only just making it ashore to ride out the pain. A bit later, he heads to an abandoned shack in the same secluded area as his own tucked-away cabin and leaves a message in Russian that he needs the emergency procedure. There's a hint of playfulness to this skullduggery, Denis' way of misdirecting the audience to make something that should, frankly, be fascinating -- the heart transplant Louis requests from this sinister black market -- cinematically palatable before burying the thriller aspects in indecipherable opacity. The Intruder may not have a narrative, but the director will at least be kind enough to tease us with one.

But her main focus, as with the source essay, are the philosophical implications of receiving a heart transplant. Thanks to the miracle of modern medicine, man himself can now become a metaphorical Ship of Theseus, an object whose parts are replaced until one questions whether it remains the original subject. Louis not only requests a heart from the shadowy organization tailing him but a young heart, ensuring that he inherits the flesh of someone totally different than him (ultimately, he receives a young woman's heart, further emphasizing the split). The Ship of Theseus quandary forces one to ask whether an object whose parts have been systematically replaced can still be thought of as the original source. In these cases, we must not only ask whether Louis is the same person but whether he even is a human being anymore.

Ergo, the heart becomes an intruder in Louis' body, though if it does corrupt and alter Louis, it's doubtful anyone would mind the change. Though we receive marginally more clues about his past than any of the side characters who flutter about as if the cast of a fever dream, Louis tacitly reveals a dark past, possibly as a murderer. Occasionally, the camera moves not into moments of fantasy but subjective perception, showing Louis suddenly stabbing his pharmacist lover, only for the next shot to show her breathing in bed next to him. That disturbing side exacerbates the feelings of disconnect he emits when he travels abroad, first to Korea for the surgery, then to Tahiti to track down a long-lost son (thus intruding on his child's life).

The changed locales bring out the flip side of intrusion and secrecy: intense loneliness. Louis' harsh intensity makes him a fit for his secluded cabin in the wilderness, but the urban bustle and politeness of South Korea makes him look like a freak. Even the businessmen who meet with him are convivial and ingratiating. The cool blue that hung over the first act gives way to a neon glow that washes out Louis' menace. When he leaves for Tahiti, Denis gets away with infusing the film with one of her biggest themes, post-colonialism. Korea, never a Western colony but once under Japanese rule, looks more sophisticated and wealthy than the backwoods of France from whence Louis came. Tahiti is poorer, to be sure, but the bustle is electric. Tahiti's incandescent waters prove even more of a bad fit for Louis than Korea.

Still, for all of Louis' isolation, there exists possibilities for communication that would not have been possible in the colonial days. The old man meets a Korean as an equal in a restaurant when the kind Korean man briefly bonds with the protagonist over an Elvis song. The secret organization's ability to move back and forth at will across the landscapes reveals how easily one can now travel the world, a convenience that exacerbates feelings of loneliness by rapidly thrusting people into alien environments but also opening the possibility of connection. Louis might simply be too old to readjust.

Like memories, L'Intrus can capture minute, trivial minutiae in exacting detail but also leave massive, glaring omissions in linearity. The poetic realism allows for straightforward shots that morph into abstractions without warning or transition. The Russian woman who intoned the opening lines heads the team of covert operatives who trail Louis interacts with him and appears to be instrumental in securing the old man's new heart, yet she takes on an otherworldly quality. She hangs over Louis like death, or maybe his conscience, finally come home to torment its master. Though she has dialogue and direct contact with other characters, she reminded me of the silent young man outside the apartment complex in Kieslowski's The Decalogue, the spectral observer who looks upon the other characters with grave judgment. Denis' camera can form unconventional yet suggestive pairings, mixing the freckles on the pharmacist's face with the liver spots on Louis' back as the two make love or turning money into both the common denominator among the various locations and also the object that most separates people.* Her camera never sits still, and when it does slow down, it's only to capture the intense inner movement and turmoil behind the characters' eyes.

Even the more natural and real moments of the film have their stretched dimensions. Louis heads to Tahiti to find the son he never knew, but the man wants nothing to do with him. It's possible that the son isn't actually in Tahiti, and even that Louis doesn't have a son at all. Maybe this Tahitian lovechild is just Louis' way of not taking care of the estranged son who definitely exists (the husband of the border guard back in France) A friend from Trebor's past then holds auditions among local men to play the part of Louis' son. The people who come and stand before a panel cannot be actors: they're too shy, too confused by the whole thing, to be extras mugging for their five seconds. But the nature of their auditions is so odd that it turns this bit of documentary into one of the most ephemeral and abstract moments of the whole film.

Furthermore, the use of film history reveals the director's ability to place the questions her film raises within a larger context of cinematic metaphysics. Denis never uses film quotation out of the enthusiasm that marks, say, De Palma or Scorsese's reverence, but she has the same ability to reshape meaning from canon films. A shot of the Russians back around Louis' empty shack hunting vaguely recalls The Rules of the Game, while Denis uses clips from an unfinished film by Paul Gégauff, 1965's Le Reflux, to provide flashback material for Louis' time in Tahiti as a younger man (the clips feature a young Subor). This trick, reminiscent of Steven Soderbergh's flashback tactic in The Limey, recognizes Subor as a distinct entity from his character, suggesting that the actor intrudes upon the character's life and that the complicated pasts of everyone involved should be considered. By admitting that someone else occupies the character, Denis can deepen her questions of the nature of the soul and the sense of profound loneliness that pervades the film. Louis already exists as a heartless man, someone whose immoral past corrupts him until he finally gets a functioning heart, which softens him for a time until his body at last rejects the organ. The split between Subor and Trebor compounds the unalterable course of this hollow man: he has no soul, and if someone else does not possess him, he's even more directionless.

The film, particularly its last, tropics-set act, owes a debt to the work of Paul Gauguin, and L'Intrus unfolds as a post-impressionist, principally synthetist, work. It is a film of lines and colors but no shape until it all the elements come together. Thus, The Intruder always feels as if it's still being assembled to the end, underlined by a minimalist score from frequent collaborator Stuart Staples of Tindersticks that also feels as if it's still in the writing phase. Denis is honest about this construction, revealing her aims in the manner in which she displays the title: she has a flashlight dart wildly over a black screen, revealing portions of the letters that make up the title until the red letters finally glow in full. Then, for a brief moment, she returns to the initial method of showing the word, suggesting that even when we get the full picture, we must still suss out some aspects of the film's makeup. It might explain why the film ends not on the somber, unseen and unremarked finale of Louis' life but on a shot of his neighbor (Béatrice Dalle), a young dog trainer he unsuccessfully attempted to seduce, sledding with her dogs. It's as much of a throwaway as any scene in the film's collage of moods and feelings over concrete images, but it somehow fits even as it raises yet more questions about this dense film I cannot yet hope to answer. However, it's always helpful when films like this make the prospect of repeated study seem so delightful and irresistible.



*Money is the only thing that keeps Louis and his genuine son together back in France -- the son calls his dad a lunatic but pockets the latest conciliatory payment as he does all the rest -- yet Louis' attempt to pay off his "son" in Tahiti leads the local hired to impersonate the mystery man to balk and run away. For Louis, still unaware of the truth behind the young man who visits him in the hospital, this signifies his son rejecting him just as his heart rejects his body.

Friday, September 4, 2009

Le Petit Soldat

Le Petit Soldat, Jean-Luc Godard's follow-up to Breathless, was finished in 1960 but kept out of cinemas for three years. With its frank discussion of the Algerian War, it should come as little surprise that censors and distributors buried the thing, and by the time it came out it was already a relic in the director's prolific '60s canon. Less freewheeling than Breathless, Le Petit Soldat seeks to mix that film's hipster romance with an actual plot. Ergo, it lacks much of the charm of Godard's debut, but it also shows the director moving into more adventurous territory and tackling daring subjects even as he avoids the radicalism of some of his other works.

That's not to say that Godard's sense of whimsy has left him, however; the first act of the movie plays out like a deliciously tongue-in-cheek parody of the spy genre. Bruno Forestrier (Michel Subor), a Frenchman living in exile in Geneva to avoid the draft, finds himself working for French right-wing terrorist group OAS as an agent. How this craven, arrogant, clueless dope got a job like this only adds to the humor. To prove his loyalty, his superiors charge him with assassinating Palivoda, a radio host who espouses pro-Algerian sentiments on-air. If Bruno fails, he'll either have to go back to France and face enlistment, or stay and be killed by OAS.

Bruno's attempts to take down Palivoda are hysterical without ever skirting the line of over-the-top lunacy. Bruno's internal monologues -- which include at least one reference to Breathless in the form of a critique of the "cowardice" of female drivers -- establish him as a well-read, well-traveled man whose confidence and smugness suggest that the task will take him no time at all. Then he pulls his car up next to his target's, and he simply can't do it. Those earlier monologues set up the terrific irony of Bruno's self-perception (you'd be forgiven for comparing him to Breathless' deluded protagonist), but they also reveal how far Bruno is mentally from the ideology of his bosses. His thorough artistic understanding suggests a left-wing stance, but in reality he doesn't care enough to have an ideology.

As he ruminates over his assignment, Bruno finds himself further distracted by Veronica Dreyer (Anna Karina), who also works for a terrorist group, though she aids the left-wing FLN, a sort of National Liberation Front for Algeria. Her introduction turns the film into a surprisingly touching love story, though one that still comes with the dark irony of the first act. Le Petit Soldat is the first of many Godard films to feature Karina, who became his muse through the '60s and whom he married a year after shooting this film. It's not hard to see what attracted the director: Karina is certainly gorgeous, but her ability to move between detached artistic reflection and irresistible charm encapsulates Godard's dichotomy better than anything the director did in either this or his debut. Raoul Cotard's cinematography is noticeably rougher here than his work on Breathless, though in honesty I can't tell if that can be more attributed to the DVD quality than the film stock (let's just say that Fox Lorber is no Criterion). Regardless, Karina still shines through the grain, and her bubbly intellectualism is a treat.

And even if the film lacks the visual polish of Breathless though it certainly ports over the lack of cohesion -- and it definitely doesn't use all of that film's dizzying techniques, which is fine by me anyway -- it contains three scenes that I would take over the whole of Godard's debut. Two of them are directly related: just as the story ground to a halt in Breathless for a wonderful diversion of art and politics in Breathless, so too does the action of Le Petit Soldat suddenly break and confine itself to a small room. The scene in which Bruno photographs Veronica, prodding her with artistic and political questions to provoke a response, is a miniature ballet. The way Veronica twirls jovially about the apartment, cheerfully tossing out responses to Bruno's queries and only rarely betraying a look of annoyance when Bruno asks a particularly asinine question, is beautiful, matched only by a far simpler scene that comes a bit later. The two play a child's game where they draw three shapes -- a triangle, square and circle -- and then expand them into drawings. Bruno forms the shapes into letters, then ends up writing "I love you" for Veronica. It's such a simple thing, so precisely drawn by Bruno as though it were an official document, and that little moment interests me so much more than all of Godard's political and aesthetic radicalism.

The third moment of note bears no resemblance at all to the previous two, and it's frankly one of the more shocking depictions of torture I've ever seen on-screen. Forget all the elaborate, graphic, celebratory depictions in today's "torture porn," the matter-of-fact, passionless presentation of Bruno's torture at the hands of Algerian revolutionaries contains all the horror that a scene like this should contain. To get information, they burn his hands, electrocute him, dunk his head in a tub; they even waterboard him, after a fashion (he is not strapped down, but they do wrap a cloth around his head and pour water onto it until it seals the fabric). The way that cloth puffs out and then shrinks around Subor's features, particularly his open, gasping mouth, makes him a visage of Death. This scene is made all the more horrific by its aural sparsity: the diegetic sound is generally confined to the noise of pouring water, the clinking of handcuffs as Bruno tries to move his arms away from the flame. Godard fills the gap with another one of Bruno's monologues, where he calmly describes the techniques used against him and even professes a certain respect for his captors. He doesn't even know why he refuses to divulge information, since he couldn't care less about his employers, which further emphasizes the waste of it all.

Le Petit Soldat continues Godard's conundrum of using his work to laud and tribute the Hollywood cinema he loves so dearly even as he tries to undermine its industrialized aesthetics and structure. He has an exact formalist eye, so precise that he knows just where to tug a thread and pull the whole thing out of place. Where a "normal" director might have panned between two characters having a conversation slowly, to capture the mise-en-scène, Godard whips the camera so quickly between his speakers at such a speed that all blurs for a second before suddenly refocusing on the one talking. Amusingly, Bruno finds himself trapped in a conversation on a train, where the other man speaks so fast that no one even bothered to translate his speech into English subtitles. The effect is of course lost on the French or those who can speak and understand it so fluently that they can keep up with the guy, but American and other foreign audiences have an extra insight into Bruno's own befuddlement with the character.

As with Breathless, though, Le Petit Soldat can never fully reconcile that whimsical, celebratory cinephile with the artiste revolutionary. Both end with a sort of anticlimax that is surely the point but also leaves us scratching our heads. Nevertheless, even if it's a step down aesthetically, Le Petit Soldat shows the director growing in fascinating ways, hooking up with a promising muse and delivering some of the most memorable scenes you're likely to find in any movie. It also establishes one hell of a credo for film lovers: "Photography is truth, and cinema is truth 24 times per second."