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Journey
to the End of the World
Michael Joshua Rowin on Notre musique
Dir. Jean-Luc Godard, France, Wellspring
In taking war as the
starting point of investigation (again) in his latest
film, legendary director Jean-Luc Godard has created
an emotionally devastating, if not politically incisive,
work of art. Notre musique has been viewed as
Godard's attempt to operate in a slightly different
vein-in terms of structure, tone, and character-but
it also points to the same rift that has existed in
his films since the late Seventies, when Godard largely
abandoned Marxist tactics and entered a more “poetic”
phase in his filmmaking. Namely, that rift is between
overarching themes and moods, and the particular evidence-since
Godard is so fond of comparing himself to a scientist-these
themes and moods are based upon. Godard's last feature,
In Praise of Love, is sumptuous, melancholic,
and searching in its treatise on love and historical
memory. But when Godard shoots fish in a barrel by using
the film as a weak, pointless attack on American culture
generally and Spielberg specifically, the foundation
of such visual poetics becomes questionable.
However much it fails in its particular points about
Sarajevo, Israel/Palestine, and genocide committed against
Native Americans, Notre musique is an improvement
on the style Godard has been working in for the last
25-odd years, marking the first time Godard's belief
in a fallen world-particularly a fallen world of cinema
and the image-fully resonates. Maybe it's too soon to
say, but Notre musique strikes one as the culmination
of everything Godard has been exploring, with mixed
results, in those years: found footage analysis, the
effects of war on individual and historical memory,
the beauty and terror of the image, the responsibility
of art in an age of forgotten genocides. Appropriately,
Notre musique is modeled on Dante, with “Kingdom”
number one a “Hell” of found footage carnage from newsreel
and classic films like Alexander Nevsky and Apocalypse
Now. It's a brutal catalogue of mankind's march
toward self-destruction, and while Godard partly strays
into aestheticization, the clashing piano chords on
the soundtrack, the video-produced color saturation,
and the rhythmic jolts and rushes of montage concentrate
attention on the malleability of the images-their status
as representations-as much as the loaded content. This
“critical work” of “never discovered . . . historical
montage”-as Godard has called the concept behind this
editing style-is at its most accessible here, a far
cry from the information overload of Histoire(s)
du cinema. Granted, the point being made is much
more straightforward than anything in that video series,
perhaps even simplistic by comparison, but one admires
the human voice in which Godard speaks for us mere mortals.
“Purgatory” takes place in present day Sarajevo. The
starting point is a literary conference, but it gives
way to an interview with Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish,
a lecture by Uncle Jean-Luc himself, and the picture-taking
wanderings of two young Jewish women, Olga (Nade Dieu)
and Judith (Sarah Adler), the latter of whom surveys
the city's visible signs of war and rebirth.. This is
Godard's most generous cinema in ages-instead of the
didactic, obvious recriminations of In Praise of
Love or the impenetrable narrative of Allemagne
90 neuf zéro, the melancholy rendered unfortunately
dormant in so many of Godard's later films is fully
realized here. Godard's feelings about the role of art
in influencing political change have always been extremely
ambivalent: Notre musique's characters express
the purgatorial state of this second kingdom, earth,
partly as the failure of artists to truly comprehend
the events they place at the center of their masterpieces.
Homer, one says, knew nothing about war, and told stories
only to amuse himself.
While the two sides of the Israel-Palestinian conflict
are aired, Godard takes it upon himself to provide specific
examples of the dynamic between cinematic representation
and reality. His “lecture” may be the best of Godard's
personal musings since the coffee cup sequence from
Two or Three Things I Know About Her. Godard,
over a shot of a lone, swinging light bulb, calls cinema
“our music,” the light we shine on reality to search
and illuminate our surroundings. But he also expresses
the lack at the center of this utopian vision: “behind
the image lies the void.” Dialectic extends to a global
scale. The creation of Israel and the displacement of
Palestinians can be seen as a classic example of shot-reverse
shot, a thesis of hope and an antithesis of pain creating
a synthesis of history. “I is another,” Rimbaud's famous
cry of alienation-as well as Nina's cry for help in
Vivre sa vie-makes a return in Notre musique
as another expression of irreconcilability, as well
as an epithet for the similar Jewish women who come
to very different conclusions regarding the possibility
of peace.
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Like so much of late
Godard, Notre musique is an aphorism-fest that
at times borders on the insufferable, but there are
some inserted gems here that lodge in the memory unlike
anything from Passion, Prenom Carmen,
or In Praise of Love: “There will be total liberty
when it's the same to live or die”; “We always talk
about the death of God but don't live our lives as if
that were the case” (paraphrased). The gloomy eulogizing
is justified by an adept handling of matters of war
and peace, even if the politics of Bosnia and the Middle
East become mere background. Notre musique fails
only when one considers the more complex political reality
Godard overlooks in order to voice complaints about
the state of the world. Ultimately, it's difficult to
discern if Notre musique truly has as much to
say about these conflicts as it does about art and the
innate compacity for human cruelty.
In a way, one of Godard's aphorisms comes back to bite
him: “We parade victims in order to make us feel better
about the oppression we perpetrate.” At the end of the
second Kingdom, Godard learns the news of Olga's suicide
in an Israeli movie theater, where she calls upon anybody
who wants to die for peace to join her. In the third
Kingdom, “Paradise,” Olga finds a sun-drenched forest
and lake, populated by young idealists protected by
American soldiers-Godard's vision of heaven, unsurprisingly,
doesn't lack a military presence (imperial forces are,
indeed, everywhere). But then, there's no fighting,
and Olga's tranquil walk through this pastoral landscape
compliments the initial Hell of endless visual mayhem.
In other late films like Hail Mary and Prenom
Carmen, Godard cuts to shots of nature (sea, moon,
grassy plains, sky) to evoke the mystery of the cosmos,
to humble his stories and characters. Here, the tone
is different: while undeniably strange, this could be
a sight realizable on the earth. Funny how, when a fallen
world renders peace an impossibility, martyrdom becomes
the only option.
At Cannes this year Chantal Akerman stated that Notre
musique was anti-Semitic, a startling accusation
by somebody initially inspired by Godard's films. But
“Paradise” gives the impression, more than ever, that
Godard's politics are now deeply influenced by a sort
of skeptical messianism. It's understandable how such
bitter longing for a pre-Fall world, when aimed in a
certain direction (in this case the Israelis), can get
mistaken for hatred. Certainly, such dramatic religious
overtones (inseparable from Godard's later work) dampen
political analysis. The question remains as to how these
overtones so devastatingly enter into this film. He
may be loathe to admit it, and it may belie Notre musique's
often insightful dialectics, but it's quite possible
that in Godard's films emotion trumps any pretensions
of scientific inquiry. |
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