Summary
Two
country peasants are recruited to join the army and serve in the war.
They are promised wealth, fulfilment and freedom to do whatever they wish
whilst in active service. In a crusade that takes in most of
the world, the two new recruits indulge their passion for rape, killing
and acquiring luxury cars. Yet the victory they have been promised
fails to arrive...
Review
Jean-Luc
Godard’s fifth film sees a radical departure from his earlier films and
the emergence of a more politically antagonistic form of cinema.
At the same time, Les Carabiniers makes a strong anti-war statement
and attacks the capitalist system in all its forms. The film is less
clearly targeted than Godard’s subsequent political films but its tone
is nonetheless vociferous and angry, although the anger is tempered by
Godard’s characteristic warped humour.
Through
a combination of shocking and outrageously comical scenes, involving attempted
rape, firing squads and pictures of rotting corpses, Godard evokes the
grotesqueness and sheer mindless stupidity of war. However, this
is much more than an anti-war film. Godard goes way beyond that and
makes a virulent attack on the capitalist system, no doubt a response to
the American war with Viet-Nam (a subject Godard returns to with greater
passion in La Chinoise). When the two war heroes return to
their shack, they present their women with a suitcase full of postcards
of objects they can never possess – a reminder that the capitalist system
promises much yet ultimately delivers nothing of consequence.
As
with most of Godard’s more experimental films, Les Carabiniers aroused
more than its fair share of negative criticism. On its first release,
it was hastily withdrawn from cinemas when it failed to attract audiences,
and the critics wrote the film of as a boring, incoherent mass of muddled
concepts.
Although
less well structured and focused than some of Godard’s subsequent films,
Les
Carabiniers is an intelligent film with a unique visual style.
To create the illusion of an old war film, it is shot in black and white
on grainy film, with numerous inserts of stock footage of real wars.
It is probably this unusual cinematography and the director’s quirky black
humour which gives the film its charm. As ever, Godard is profound
and witty at the same time, managing to deliver a topical statement with
breathtaking originality.
© James Travers 2001
For more on Jean-Luc Godard see:
The life of Jean-Luc Godard
Best of the French New Wave
A bout de souffle
Vivre sa vie
Alphaville
Masculin, féminin
Le Mépris
Pierrot le fou
Eloge de l'amour
Buy films by Jean-Luc Godard
More about the French New Wave
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