Showing posts with label Chantal Akerman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chantal Akerman. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 14, 2024

The Captive (La Captive)


 






















Director Chantal Akerman















THE CAPTIVE (La Captive)             B+                                                                              France  Belgium  (118 mi)  2000  d: Chantal Akerman

For, just as in the beginning it is formed by desire, so afterwards love is kept in existence only by painful anxiety.

—Marcel Proust, Chapter 1, La Prisonnière, 1923

I thought that literary works should not be adapted to film, that music should not be used, that cuts and shots/counter-shots should not be used – these kinds of prohibitions.  I was very radical, undoubtedly too much so, but I needed to be in order to define myself, form myself as a filmmaker.

—Chantal Akerman, 2001

Listed by Cahiers du Cinéma as their #2 film of 2000, it must be said that literary adaptations are not something typically associated with experimental or auteurist directors, though Godard and Truffaut made several films based on literary sources.  Akerman was an avid reader since adolescence and initially skeptical about literary adaptations, believing they were diametrically opposed to her radically innovative film style, alternating between fiction and documentaries, writing her own scripts, nonetheless, having read Proust when still in school, she began to toy with the idea of adapting Proust’s Remembrance of Things Past (In Search of Lost Time, published in seven volumes between 1913 and 1927) just after she completed Jeanne Dielman, 23, quai du Commerce,1080 Bruxelles (1976).  But it was only 25 years later, after having experimented with a wide range of genres and film styles, that she felt ready to try again, with the help of film scholar Eric De Kuyper who shared script ideas, though Akerman wrote every word, inspired by their mutual admiration for Hitchcock’s Vertigo (1958) and Marnie (1964), eventually making a film loosely inspired by the fifth volume, La Prisonnière.  While Proust’s modernist style and narrative complexity have deterred directors, believing the work is unadaptable, in particular the existential interior focus, as it follows the narrator’s autobiographical recollections of childhood and experiences into adulthood, but it was precisely these challenges that attracted Akerman’s interest, where she is quoted as saying, “I remembered that there was that apartment, and the corridor, and the two characters—I said, that’s a story for me.”  Having come from experimental traditions, where nearly all her films deal with captivity and the many forms it can take, this is a study of women as an enigma, in particular lesbian desire, explored exclusively through a male perspective, yet what’s exceedingly fascinating is a lesbian filmmaker’s vision of a gay writer’s work.  The first of Proust’s books published posthumously, this is a complex and multi-layered  novel, with its fabulous cast of characters, its rich evocation of a Belle Époque period and society and, above all, its intricate plot, with Proust conceiving love as tragic, becoming a film about the haunting effect of memories and fantasies, where there’s something completely disorienting about this film that mirrors Hitchcock’s Vertigo (1958), revered for its suspense, hypnotic camerawork, and astute character psychology, even matching Hitchcock’s rear projection effects out the back of the car, but even more importantly both films accentuate how the destructive male obsessions of projecting their own desires onto unsuspecting women have disastrous consequences.  Opening and closing with the sounds of the sea, we’re introduced to Stanislas Mehrar as Simon, a spoiled and wealthy young man who is initially seen watching Super 8 homemade video of a woman with friends during their seaside summer together in Normandy, freezing the frame like a still image of her face, before transitioning into her silent stalker, Akerman’s version of Truffaut’s Jean-Pierre Léaud, both dressed in a suit and tie, each a narcissistic voyeur of young women.  Completely obsessed with Ariane (Sylvie Testud), the camera follows him through a labrynthian journey through Paris as he tails her car (a Peugeot convertible), follows her footsteps in the city, where the heightened shadows on the staircase walls recall film noir, leading into the Musée Rodin, filled with sculptures, paintings, and art objects, where she finds herself pausing in front of an Aphrodite bust, a creature who emerged from the sea, perhaps an ideal representative of the female form, becoming an encounter between the real and the mythical, where Ariane is ultimately viewed as one of his prized collectibles, having no identity of her own, as she appears to exist only in his fantasies.  The formal precision of Sabine Lancelin’s camera has a hovering presence, following them both closely, with Simon watching from an adjacent room, his moves repeating hers as she appears and disappears, always just out of his grasp, where their forms are merged into the same frame.  In something of a surprise, we discover she is living with him in his aging grandmother’s massive home with her own room, where she is something of a willing prisoner, passively following his every wish, which is spelled out in great detail.  One of the unforgettable scenes has them bathing together, but in separate tubs, as there is a frosted glass pane between them, which is not initially recognizable, where it appears Simon is talking to himself in an extended monologue that veers into explicit sexual references, still quite surprising in this day and age, as if drawn from the pages of D. H. Lawrence’s Lady Chatterly’s Lover, but eventually she casually responds as the camera pulls back allowing a fuller perspective, with Ariane, seen naked behind the screen, becoming a shadowy presence, as if lurking only in his imagination. 

Volker Schlöndorf made his Proust film SWANN IN LOVE in 1984 and Raúl Ruiz his TIME REGAINED in 1999, both partial adaptations, but sadly, Harold Pinter wrote a screenplay that was never filmed, while the Luchino Visconti and Joseph Losey projects from the 1970’s were never realized.  Having the self-reflective quality of Godard’s Breathless (À Bout de Souffle) (1959) and My Life to Live (Vivre Sa Vie: Film en douze tableaux) (1962), the minimalist existential quandary of Bresson’s Une Femme Douce (1969) and Four Nights of a Dreamer (Quatre nuits d'un rêveur... (1971), yet also the feel of one of Rohmer’s moral tales of alienated youth, what’s striking, however, especially for a Chantal Akerman film, a director known for her ruminative observations of women, is how the film sticks with the male perspective, as everything is seen through his naïve eyes, literally everything.  Women are viewed as something for him to possess, forcing viewers into experiencing the excruciating yet pervasive oppression of male patriarchy, a viewpoint that borders on the absurd by his inability to comprehend anything about the mindset of his female lover, as his jealous suspicions overshadow everything he knows and feels about her.  This is a highly stylized, intensely personal art film that is not for everyone, very slow in pace, where not much happens, yet the subdued charm and dispassionate manner in which things are realized defies realism, feeling more theatrical or surreal, as if sleepwalking through a dream, fixated on nonsensical recurring phrases, where the absurdly sounding dialogue could just as easily be spoken by Vladimir and Estragon in Beckett’s Waiting for Godot.  With the protagonists renamed from the source material of Albertine and Marcel, most of the key scenes of Simon’s tormented relations with Ariane remain intact, as this is a plunge into the suffocating effects of jealousy in a contemporary love affair, with Akerman ridding herself of the historical context of Proust’s novel, so there is no looking into the past, no remembrance, yet she was spellbound by the actual dialogue, but the most radical changes come from the ending, which turns into a kind of road movie reminiscent of Rossellini’s Journey to Italy (1954), offering a liberating release from the confined enclosure of the Parisian apartment, which feels more like a tomb.  Simon is a sickly recluse, subject to allergies and pollen, and mostly confined to his room, where he looks pale, like a ghost, often seen alone in his room reading the newspaper, or frustrated by his writings, his bedside surrounded by notebooks, yet continually perplexed by that blank page he never seems to fill.  While Ariane dutifully comes to Simon’s room when requested, he also enters her room while she sleeps, or appears to be sleeping, offering no hint of resistance, allowing him to “do what he likes,” which only frustrates him even more, where so little is known about her inner nature, always present, yet sexually elusive, as we never see him shed his clothes or alter his extreme sense of bourgeois reserve, suggesting there is an overwhelming sense of detachment that defines them.  Despite her unconditional availability, she is indifferent and emotionally vacant, where there is little reciprocal intimacy, with Simon sensing that she’s holding out on him, as she’s evasive in her noncommittal responses or explanations about where she’s been, using one of her friends, Andrée (Olivia Bonamy), to basically spy on her and report back to him, yet she’s equally vague, amusingly omitting or forgetting details (like they may be having an affair!) while reporting contradictory information back to him, where he has this incessant need to control and have ownership over every facet of Ariane’s life, insisting there be no secrets between them.  However, he’s under the impression that she may actually prefer the company of women, frenetically driven to understand the secret of what women do together, suspecting she may be having an affair with a female opera star, Léa (Aurore Clément), brilliantly realized in a balcony scene where Ariane amateurishly sings a love duet from Mozart’s Cosi fan Tutti with a more professionally sounding older woman (Sophie Assante) from an opposite window, Prendero quel brunettino I Cosi fan tutte - Glyndebourne YouTube (3:07), while Simon powerlessly watches the scene from below, as if appearing in someone else’s dream.  So this turns into something of a detective story, expressed through voyeurism and his insatiable need for control, as he has an obsessive curiosity about what she does on her own, with an overcontrolling nature that blinds him to any existing connection between them, while also ignoring any fascination with the world outside.  

Premiering at Director’s Fortnight at Cannes, but never released commercially in the United States, made between two rare excursions into lighthearted comedies, this somber work is a modernist melodrama that elaborates on the styles, themes, and moods of other melodramas dating back to the silent era, becoming a study of pathological jealousy and unfulfilled desire, yet what’s remarkable is that Simon verbalizes every thought in an extremely rational and analytic manner, leaving nothing to chance, while Ariane keeps her thoughts and emotions to herself, almost like a silent screen siren, where the stark contrast between them expresses itself in underlying emotional turbulence.  The old-fashioned décor in Simon’s apartment, with its imposing antique furniture, heavy draperies, and multiple doorways, suggests a wealth of space, while the aesthetic sumptuousness and perfectly framed compositions recall Alain Resnais’ Last Year at Marienbad (L'Année Dernière à Marienbad) (1961), another film that famously explores the structure of memory through a metaphor of grandiose architecture, as the empty corridors and closed rooms of the apartment come to represent the internal landscape of Simon’s fixation, an expression of his own captivity.  Whenever they go out, they’re always alone, finding themselves living in a vacuum, as the sidewalks and streets are strangely empty, where the surrounding population may as well not exist.  Known for portraying unconventional sexual relationships, a precise form is always present with Akerman, and just the way the film unravels reveals a relationship fraught with tension, with Simon continually tightening the noose, increasing the pressure in wanting to learn more and more, where he is never satisfied, as it’s not sex but her very soul that he desires, needing every secret exposed, as only then can he maintain his dominance.  Much of this film plays out in his own mind, as he verbalizes what transpires internally, where he needs to speak the words for them to resonate, while Ariane is his submissive accomplice, yet her unspoken thoughts and desires remain a complete mystery to him, and instead of being enthralled by the challenge, he is completely undone by what he cannot comprehend, feeling stymied by the walls of an invisibly perceived resistance that he finds overwhelming.  Simon’s adventure into the Bois de Boulogne red-light district accentuates the obsession, as he’s searching for someone like Ariane, not only in looks but with her same passive demeanor, someone he can control sexually, but he’s disappointed in his efforts, while he also awkwardly interrogates two young lesbian actresses (Bérénice Bejo and Anna Mouglalis), hoping to learn some of Ariane’s secrets, yet his singleminded takeaway is startlingly naïve in its chauvinistic arrogance.  A radical deconstruction of self, time, and space, there are compulsively repetitive motifs that only inflame the jealous lover’s suspicions, like chasing her in his car around the chic fashionable districts of Paris, being caught in a labyrinth, walking around in circles, unable to find his way out, with the camera using slow tracking shots to meticulously follow the time it takes to move step by step, forcing viewers to feel the passage of time, or continually peppering her friends with questions, hoping to penetrate her mysterious interior realms, but rather than add light to his dilemma, he ends up feeling paralyzed, remaining stuck in an unresolved predicament.  The more he spies on her, the less he knows, ultimately losing himself in the process and drowning in his own pathetic ineptitude.  Unable to cope with uncertainty, he is the exact opposite of the more adaptable Ariane, an opaque presence who just goes with the flow, not letting anything really bother her.  While his rigidly controlled behavior is the very picture of obsession, caught in the prison of his own jealousy, it is the male rather than the female protagonist who is the real captive, as he cannot escape his own debilitating insecurities, which replace his anxiety about writing.  By the end, the morose musical soundtrack from Rachmaninoff - The Isle of the Dead, Op.29 - Vladimir Ashkenazy - Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra YouTube (21:10) adds such a pensive tone, creating an intimate yet dark space, where the final sequence explores all the possibilities of night, with the sea devoured by an inky blackness, becoming a dance of death through the light reflected on the water. 

LECTURE & FILM: Das Kino von Chantal Akerman // LA CAPTIVE (2000)  Lecture by co-writer Eric de Kuyper at DFF Deutsches Filminstitut & Filmmuseum (in English except the introduction), January 11, 2018, YouTube (1:37:44)

Sunday, June 13, 2021

Les Rendezvous d’Anna (The Meetings of Anna)






 


















Director Chantal Akerman on the set











LES RENDEZVOUS D’ANNA (THE MEETINGS OF ANNA)               A-                                France  Belgium  Germany  (120 mi)  1978  d:  Chantal Akerman

If I have a reputation of being difficult, it’s because I love the everyday and want to present it.  In general, people go to the movies precisely to escape the everyday.                                     —Chantal Akerman, 1982, Chantal Akerman: The Integrity of Exile and the Everyday - LOLA

A rigidly formalized, semi-autobiographical film about transience and dislocation, compartmentalized into tightly controlled, geometric spaces, showing the depersonalization of work and relationships in the sprawling postwar European landscape, with long monologues that feel oppressive and endlessly downbeat.  Coming after NEWS FROM HOME (1977), an early experimental documentary that juxtaposes images of New York City with the texts of letters written to Akerman by her mother in Belgium and read aloud offscreen by Akerman, her follow-up to Jeanne Dielman, 23, quai du Commerce,1080 Bruxelles (1976), the film that would forever link Akerman to feminism and women’s cinema, where this film as well serves as an homage to her mother, arguably the most significant figure in both her personal and professional life, figuring prominently in films made throughout her career.  In something of a character study, French actress Aurore Clément plays Anna, the central protagonist and filmmaker’s alter-ego, an accomplished filmmaker who travels from Germany to Paris via Brussels, living in hotels while attending screenings of her films (which are never shown).  Along the way she has a brief but intense relationship with a German man Heinrich (Helmut Griem), the shared lover of both Liza Minnelli and Michael York in Bob Fosse’s CABARET (1972), while also meeting Ida, her fiancé’s mother (Magali Noël), the sensual beauty in Fellini’s AMARCORD (1973), her own mother (Lea Massari), the vanishing woman from Antonioni’s L’AVVENTURA (1960) and the overly affectionate mother in Louis Malles MURMUR OF THE HEART (1971), and her longtime lover Daniel (Jean-Pierre Cassel), the star of Jean Renoir’s THE ELUSIVE CORPORAL (1962), yet the journey is defined by frustrated attempts to contact an Italian woman (never seen) with whom she had an affair.  Continually disconnected from the present, her life is a fragmented landscape of enclosed spaces from hotel rooms, telephone booths, bars and restaurants, train compartments, car rides, and railway platforms, offering glimpses of unfamiliar streets in unfamiliar locations, moving through a series of brief personal encounters that yield little satisfaction, where the film accentuates the emotional gulf that separates people, reflecting the massive transformations that have defined European life in the last half-century.  Akerman stands at the forefront of redefining film from a woman’s perspective, in stark contrast to the patriarchal cinema that has come before, reflected by the devastation of war and the displacement of Jews and other Europeans, followed by ailing prescriptive financial plans and economic restructuring that have left national identities in tatters.  Seemingly filling that void, Akerman has formulated a cinema language that is uniquely her own, minimalist, overly detached yet utterly existential to the core, while capturing a female-centric point of view, opening doors, creating new understandings, privileging audiences to an entirely new way of seeing things cinematically.  Much of this film parallels Monica Vitti’s psychological descent in Antonioni’s RED DESERT (1964), where the modern industrial landscape has created internalized emotional fissures, becoming a subjective study of environmental female alienation, yet Akerman’s overly detached film aesthetic couldn’t be more radically different.  Anna’s female character always appears to be trapped in a box, where she’s fighting for a way out, but finds herself in the same enclosed spaces for the duration of the film, where there is no escape, no exit, no release from the oppressive environment that leaves her feeling suffocated.  Unlike Hollywood idealizations, marriage is not the answer here, and is instead avoided at every stage, as that’s part of the patriarchal trap that leaves women serving out lives of domestic servitude.  Understanding Anna’s aversion to marriage helps one understand the predicament she finds herself in, as she seeks a different alternative, yet remains unaware of a solution, leaving her life in a state of flux. 

Anna is introduced in a fixed tableau shot of a crowded railway platform in Germany, yet everyone else quickly disappears while she makes a call in an enclosed telephone booth, and is then seen carrying her everpresent bag that she lugs around everywhere.  As she registers at the hotel, she is informed by the desk clerk that her mother has left a message, leaving her perplexed how she figured out where she would be.  Making a call to Italy, she is informed there will be a two-hour wait, leaving her plenty of time to open the wall of windows only to reveal the everpresent sound of screeching trains nearby.  Escorted to a nearby theater for a screening, both the entrance and exit from the theater have dramatically pronounced doorways, leaving with someone she apparently just met, retreating to a nearby bar before they walk back to her hotel where sex is quickly initiated, but she then calls it off, nakedly instructing the gentleman to “get dressed,” literally dousing his expectations, clearly showing signs of being hurt.  Wearing no underwear, brassiere or panties, she proudly displays her nakedness, yet there isn’t an ounce of sensuality on display.  Nonetheless he invites her to his daughter’s fifth birthday party at his home on the outskirts of town the next afternoon, a German school teacher spending nearly the entire time talking endlessly about the instability of his own life in a long monologue revealing thoughts that may reflect the defeated aftermath of war, where home and motherhood are viewed as catastrophic events, as his wife left him, while he thought they were happy, never realizing there was anything wrong, followed by the loss of a best friend who moved away, now living a life of acute loneliness (perhaps explaining why he connects with her films), yet they are surrounded by a spacious green yard with flowers and a garden, where despite the crisp beauty of the wintry landscape, there is a chill in the air, revealing a devastating portrait of German alienation and discontent which she politely yet passively listens to, fading into the landscape as she departs.  She unexpectedly meets Ida at the train station in Cologne, a close friend of her mothers, both living in Brussels, but now Ida has returned home to Germany with her family, yet berates Anna for breaking off her engagement with her son not once, but twice, claiming that sort of thing just isn’t done.  Mirroring that sequence, she meets her own mother at a railway station in Brussels, choosing to spend the night in a nearby hotel, sleeping side by side in the same bed, with Anna completely naked, revealing the story of her first sexual encounter with an Italian girl at a hotel, which evoked memories of her mother, where the intimate familiarity between them is positively stunning, ending with a warning to be sure not to mention this to her father, Chantal Akerman Les rendez vous d'Anna 1978 YouTube (6:09).  It’s no accident that a shared lesbian affair mirrors a mother and daughter sharing the same bed, becoming a pivotal scene in revealing the structural emphasis of the film.  By the time she returns to Paris, she is met in a car by Daniel, driving in circles until they find a hotel, where she strips naked, but he chats endlessly about his own personal troubles, despite a very successful business career, where he seems married to the job and not to her, leaving him depleted and utterly exhausted, another long monologue of personal discontent, where she sings an Edith Piaf song to try to cheer him up, Les Amants d’un Jour (Lovers for a Day), a charming little song about a couple that commits suicide, where the subject matter, tenderly sung, couldn’t be more bleak and dispiriting, Les rendez-vous d'Anna - Singing Scene (eng sub) YouTube (4:27), standing next to a turned on television with no picture, adding an element of gloom into the picture.  By the time she gets home, however, lying in bed listening to her phone messages, including a voice of continual frustration and despair from her Italian lover who hasn’t been able to reach her for days, she remains in a state of emotional paralysis and couldn’t be more disconnected with the world around her.

Putting things in perspective, other films released the same year would include Paul Mazursky’s An Unmarried Woman, Terrence Malick’s DAYS OF HEAVEN, Charles Burnett’s Killer of Sheep, Hal Ashby’s COMING HOME, Michael Cimino’s THE DEER HUNTER, Ermanno Olmi’s THE TREE OF WOODEN CLOGS, Ingrid and Ingmar Bergman’s collaboration in Bergman, Two from the 70's: Autumn Sonata (Höstsonaten), John Carpenter’s HALLOWEEN, Robert Altman’s A Wedding, or Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s In a Year of 13 Moons (In einem Jahr mit 13 Monden), where women figure prominently in every single one, yet none radically redefine a woman’s role in cinema to the extent of this film, which has no commercial aspirations, conveying the same personal detachment of a documentary film, ultimately becoming a cinematic essay on the changing role of women.  While Akerman is a master of the tracking shot, where her film D'Est (1993) may be the greatest use of the aesthetic, yet it’s also evident here as the camera peers out the windows of moving trains or cars, revealing an industrial wasteland that is a German eyesore, but also a long montage of Parisian store windows at night, shifting from interior to exterior views, Les rendez-vous d'Anna (1978) YouTube (3:13), creating an observational perspective for viewers, who adapt to the challenge by pensively investigating more closely, yet the distinguishing feature here is the tableau shot, a fixed camera vantage point, where one marvels at all the different ways Clément is framed in symmetrical compositions that resemble architectural lines, a technique also shared by Antonioni, Les rendez-vous d'Anna (1978) YouTube (51 seconds).  In this way, viewers identify the subject through the spaces she passes through, doors, windows, hotel lobbies, telephone booths, or non-descript hotel rooms, where the meticulous precision with the way the film is shot offers a window into her interior world, particularly when those shots are extended, revealing plenty of empty space that the characters never fill, always feeling engulfed by the largesse of the surrounding landscape.  Akerman defies the voyeuristic tendency of cinema to beautify the imagery (breaking from Antonioni), even at the expense of alienating viewers, and instead uses a psychological device to best express her views on how women are trapped by a patriarchal society that sets the rules.  Each and every act that we see from Anna breaks from the familiar pattern of what’s expected in cinema, which requires a different means of evaluating her art, which certainly wasn’t done at the time this film was made, where it was viewed as a critical failure, even labeled self-indulgent, never rising to the stature achieved by JEANNE DIELMAN, always living in the shadow of that film.  But this film may actually go further, having already established feminist grounds, now challenging the idea of what constitutes a successful woman.  If not marriage, and if not a successful career, then just what is considered grounds for a women’s personal happiness and success?  That is the subject of this film, female empowerment and the changing female identity, a theme dominating her works for decades, where her films represent an uncompromising and exhaustive search for answers.  Unfortunately, she died from an apparent suicide, suggesting she may never have found peace, yet this film is a powerful example of just how skewed the landscape is against any radical restructuring of a woman’s role in society, while confronting her own lesbian sexuality from a distance, bathed in extraordinary solitude and loneliness whether alone or in the presence of others.  Women may educate themselves and change their outlook, solidifying how they view themselves, placing themselves in positions of independence and empowerment, yet the entrenched patriarchal customs and habits around the world remain stubbornly unchanged, unwilling to share power or even recognize women as anything close to equal value.