SOMETHING IN THE AIR (Après mai) A-
France (122 mi) 2012
d: Olivier Assayas
With a love a madness
for Shelley
Chatterton Rimbaud
and the needy-yap of my youth
has gone from ear to ear:
I HATE OLD POETMEN!
Especially old poetmen who retract
who consult other old poetmen
who speak their youth in whispers,
saying:--I did those then
but that was then
that was then--
O I would quiet old men
say to them:--I am your friend
what you once were, thru me
you'll be again--
Then at night in the confidence of their homes
rip out their apology-tongues
and steal their poems.
Chatterton Rimbaud
and the needy-yap of my youth
has gone from ear to ear:
I HATE OLD POETMEN!
Especially old poetmen who retract
who consult other old poetmen
who speak their youth in whispers,
saying:--I did those then
but that was then
that was then--
O I would quiet old men
say to them:--I am your friend
what you once were, thru me
you'll be again--
Then at night in the confidence of their homes
rip out their apology-tongues
and steal their poems.
—“I Am 25,” by
Gregory Corso, from Gasoline, 1958
This is an elegiac and largely autobiographical account of
Assayas’s own youth, a companion piece to his earlier work COLD WATER (1997),
arguably his best film, where both beautifully capture the mood,
atmosphere, and raw, unpretentious intensity of anxiety-ridden adolescents
caught up in their own indecisions, the terrible choices they do make, how easy
their emotions are sparked and then extinguished, and how eloquently,
beyond their own words, the films describe their fatalistic viewpoint about
their all-too-hopeless future. The
French title, After May, is much more
apropos, as the film is a collection of leftover remembrances after May 1968, a
historical moment in French history that nearly brought revolutionary change, a
combined student and worker protest that involved nearly a quarter of the
entire French population over a period of two continuous weeks, initiated as a
student rebellion, but eventually spreading to workers across the nation who
joined the students, ultimately quelled by the forcible actions of the police
who literally clubbed and beat the protesters into submission. The film won the Best Screenplay award at
Venice, opening with blistering footage of these protests, as the streets are
aflame with police in riot gear with clubs literally attacking the students,
with the guys wearing jackets and ties, or sweaters, but also helmets, who are
seen running for their lives through the tear gas, many of them hauled off to jail
APRÈS MAI
[SOMETHING IN THE AIR] OLIVER ASSAYAS - clip YouTube (1:03). There is scant evidence of rebellious long
hair, jeans, sandals or beards. The
Assayas film views this period as a rite of passage, an intensely personal
account of developing political idealism through a radicalization process
initiated in high school, where teachers, interestingly enough, were actually
teaching students about Marx, how he challenged socialists as small thinking
utopians, advocating instead a complete overhaul of the economic system. In the high school segment, various factions
are still arguing many of these same theories about how to best implement a
radical change.
Set in 1971, Clément Métayer as Gilles is a stand-in for the
director, a somewhat moody kid who draws and paints and sells leftist
newspapers on the street while getting instructions from older
Trotskyites. He and a small clan of students
initiate a clandestine night raid spray painting activist political messages
directly onto their school building, where the school ID of one of the
activists is found on the scene, where the authorities unsuccessfully attempt
to get him to name names. Also in the
clan is Gilles’ girlfriend Christine, Lola Créton (where interestingly Gilles
and Christine were the names of the protagonists in COLD WATER), perhaps his
best friend Alain (Felix Armand), a fellow artist, who has a visiting American
girlfriend Leslie (India Menuez), the implicated student Jean-Pierre (Hugo
Conzelmann), who works at his father’s socialist printing press, while Gilles
is also secretly seeing another woman on the side, Laure (Carole Combes), a
free spirited soul with wealthy parents who’s about to leave the country for an
extended summer excursion. Her absence
brings Gilles closer to Christine, where they also travel together to Italy
during the summer, where Christine hooks up with a leftist film production,
Gilles visits art museums where he continues to draw and paint, while Alain
studies painting with an artist in India.
While they all undergo radical interior transformations, which includes
rampant drug use, art, music, travel, experimental films, more open sexual
relations and frequent displays of nudity, this group filters out in various
directions around the world where their radical views evolve, with each
developing a unique view of what they can contribute, while continuing their
education and artistic development. Gilles remains the central character, but
becomes distressed at his need for individualized artistic expression, which
goes against the grain of radical Marxist sentiment which accentuates the needs
of the collective by submerging individualism.
Much of this pays tribute to Bresson’s 60’s films, including
the youthful impressionism of the budding painter in Four
Nights of a Dreamer (Quatre nuits d'un rêveur... (1971) and the
disenchantment with radical politics of The
Devil, Probably (Le diable probablement) (1977). The Grandaddy of post May 1968 films is Jean
Eustache’s The
Mother and the Whore (La Maman et la Putain) (1973), often viewed as the
end of the French New Wave and the best expression of the end of the 1960’s
hope and optimism. Like COLD WATER, the
defining scene of the film is a spectacular party sequence with music and
dancing, beautifully shot by Eric Gautier, where Laure has become a drug
addicted bohemian living at a palatial country estate, where bonfires are set
and the musical choices are simply sublime, in perfect synch with the moment,
expressing a kind of trippy psychedelia from Syd Barrett and the Soft Machine,
Nick Drake, and the Incredible String Band.
Assayas integrates music into his films as well as anyone else alive,
where the unspoken fluidity of this sequence speaks volumes, offering an
elegiac poetry to the expression of the counterculture, which has since faded
from view. It should be noted that many
of the wordless sequences from this film are among the best Assayas has ever
done. As Gilles tells his father,
however, a television screenwriter (as was Assayas’s), he felt the writing on
the show was “too strained.” This aptly
describes much of the forced political positions which are squeezed into this
film, where there are more ideas than the film knows what to do with, where
perhaps the weakest element of the film is a lack of development of the
characters, none of whom, outside of Gilles, are sympathetic or really very
memorable at all. This unfortunately
detracts from the overall impression of the film, which bears a similarity to
Lou Ye’s SUMMER PALACE (2006), where the vitality of the youthful
counterculture and freedom movements in each film are literally off the charts,
expressed with dazzling camera virtuosity, where youth is like a bright flair
burning in a sea of societal indifference, where once it burns out, all that’s
left is the indifference.