Summary
Paul is a young man who has just completed his military service. He meets
Madeleine, an attractive young woman who is an aspiring pop singer, and
tries to chat her up. The two go out together and ultimately end
up in bed together - albeit with Madeleine’s two friends, Elisabeth and
Catherine. Paul is an idealist who supports the anti-Vietnam war
movement, whilst Madeleine is a groovy mini-skirt wearing girl out for
a good time. Where will it all end?
Review
This is another exquisitely funny and very stylish piece
of cinema from one of France’s greatest directors, Jean-Luc Godard.
It is also significant in that it is the first of Godard’s films in which
the director directly broaches major political issues of the day.
1965,
when the film was made, represented a turning point in French political
history – with the surprising re-election of General de Gaulle and rising
concern about the Vietnam War and social ethics (culminating in the riots
of 1968).
In
Masculin-féminin,
Godard cleverly represents the two poles of this emerging social dichotomy
in his two leading characters. Paul represents Marxist idealism,
a champion of social justice, aware of the problems in the world around
him, but completely incapable of making any difference. By contrast,
Madeleine is the standard-bearer for the “Pepsi-Cola generation”, the bourgeois
youth, living for the present, unconcerned by the world’s social ills.
The strained interaction between Paul and Madeleine is a vivid portrayal
of how these two worlds manage to co-exist, living side-by-side, yet almost
completely oblivious of each other. Godard is pre-empting the trouble
that is to come.
As
director, Godard adopts an approach similar to that used in his earlier
film, Vivre sa vie. The film is recounted in 15 precise tableaux,
each self-contained, and each differing markedly in style, content and
editing. In this way, the film has a vivid sense of unpredictability
and freshness which gives it its depth and, to some extent, its humour.
Jean-Pierre
Léaud and Chantal Goya are perfectly cast as Paul and Madeleine.
Léaud’s character is little more than an extension of the Antoine
Doinel character he played in François Truffaut’s films – a fact
which Godard exploits to the full. (Paul even adopts the pseudonym
Doinel at one point in the film!). Whilst both characters have a
warmth and genuineness, it is probably Léaud’s Bach-whistling Paul
that is the most sympathetic and memorable.
©
James Travers 2000
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
Essay
Time is being very good to
Jean-Luc Godard, whose films reveal one of the great humanistic intelligences
of the twentieth century. (Monsieur Godard is still going strong in another
century--not that many of his most recent works have made it over here,
given the rank censorship enforced by a marketplace that beams through
mostly trivial diversions but bars the entry of most genuine works of art.)
While certainly his films provide sociopolitical snapshots of their particular
day, they remain also fresh, contemporaneous to the moment as well as to
their own moment. Masculine Feminine (Masculin-Féminin,
or Masculin, Féminin), insofar as it explores the endlessly
ambiguous and mysterious space where boys and girls interact, retains its
relevance--and, somehow, Godard's distinctive filmmaking remains cutting-edge.
We used to be so particular
in differentiating between "greater" and "lesser" Godard films, but the
passage of time keeps shifting titles from the latter category to the former.
Masculine
Feminine, however it may have once struck us, looks more and more like
a masterpiece of the nouvelle vague. When asked if Masculine Feminine
was a film about youth, Godard described it instead as "more a film
on the idea of youth. A philosophical idea, but not a practical one-a way
of reacting to things. A young way, let us say."
The narrative is disjointed.
Throughout 15 vignettes, a boy, Paul, and a girl, Madeleine, try to penetrate
each other's (and perhaps their own) image and defenses. The boy's death,
which may be a suicide, aborts this ongoing attempt of theirs at communication.
Before the end, the boy pursues his Leftist politics and, a documentary
filmmaker, conducts interviews, the girl pursues her career as a pop singer
while working at the magazine for which Paul also comes to work, and both
(more or less) pursue sex.
Little, if anything, then,
strikes us as "finished" about this film. Godard doesn't make objets d'art.
(Willie the Wyler he ain't.) His films spill into our lives as much as
our lives spill into his films, creating in fact a dialectic between life
and art. Our own experience, including our reactions to both his films
and what they show us, achieves the necessary synthesis. A Godard film
doesn't numb us into passivity. Masculine Feminine certainly doesn't.
Alert, it keeps us alert; alive, it helps make us keenly, even at times
painfully, alert and alive.
Paul--dare I say Paul Baron?
(more about which later)--is a 21-year-old who has just returned to civilian
life, and Paris, after his stint in the army, which he describes in terms
of deprivation: "[S]ixteen months with no comforts, money, love or leisure."
Military service interrupted his life, putting his growing up on hold;
Paul must now strike out to define himself. The cul in Masculine --ass
--suggests the urgent biological motive of his life, as males, at least
young males, tend to hew to this path as a lifeline; but the mask that's
also embedded in the word muddies the intent. Paul is (beneath antics)
shy, as most boys in fact are, and just right now his priority is his radical
Vietnam-era politics, a matter of deep conviction, to be sure, but at the
same time another way for him to delay getting on with his own life. Existing
in a universe that is never either-or or this-or-that, Godard knows well
that one lives many lives behind many different "masks," and one's individual
existence, whatever that means, competes with one's social existence and
political existence. Paul is a human work-in-progress; he plunges into
activism and cinematic documentation because he knows precisely what he's
doing and because he doesn't know what the hell he's doing. Like Godard;
like us.
Godard is the film's scenarist.
Nearly every film requires some sort of a script. Godard's loosely qualifies.
Let me quote from Michel Vianey's Waiting for Godard about the "script"
of this particular film: "The only working text [he] uses is a large sketch
book . . . in which he writes a large series of notes, made up essentially
of a summary of the principal sequences. . . . Dialogue written the night
before or improvised on the spot eventually fills out the summary." The
film absolutely reflects this kind of preparation. It isn't something we
watch in the usual sense of our being cozily settled. We catch it as it
catches us. Nevertheless, Godard's "original screenplay" has behind it,
and presumably somewhere in it, two stories by Guy de Maupassant: "La femme
de Paul" (1881) and "Le signe" (1886). Indeed, these two stories were supposed
to be the film's original impetus, that is, from the standpoint of those
bankrolling the project the reason for the film's coming into being in
the first place. The time, the setting and the plot of these stories claim
little connection with the film Godard made; but something of their spirit
contributes to the film's emotional texture and thematic development.
The first story is about
a young man, Paul Baron, whose mistress forsakes him one night for a lesbian
encounter, prompting his suicide. "Paul's Wife" is the literal translation
of the title, although, because Paul and Madeleine are umarried lovers,
the story has become known in English as "Paul's Mistress." Maupassant
was a troubled man--syphilitic since youth and, as a result, increasingly
unbalanced and eventually institutionalized (in 1892) after attempting
suicide by cutting his throat; but he was no fool. Madeleine may not be
married to Paul, but the point of the title is twofold: Paul's sense of
commitment to Madeleine is already based on his assumption of their spiritual
union; and Madeleine, who ends up being comforted by her new lover, at
the last feels like a bereaved widow, as though she had been Paul's wife
all along. Irony is the piercing delight of Maupassant at his best, here,
the fact that sexual infidelity, given its unhappy consequence, can strengthen
the girl's one-way emotional bond with the deceased even as she seeks solace
in someone else's arms. (The oft-repeated comparison of Maupassant and
North Carolina's O. Henry--William Sidney Porter--is ridiculous. There's
nothing in O. Henry's stories to match the psychological complexity I have
just described. His "ironies" are nothing more than plot twists.)
The slighter "La signe"--"The
Signal"--turns on an irony of almost mathematical complacency. A woman
notices from her window a prostitute who, from her window, is giving men
down in the street the beckoning look that she, Mrs. Respectability, feels
compelled to try for herself. This leads to an adulterous encounter whose
moral offensiveness, a friend of hers, another "respectable" lady, counsels
can be neutralized by using the ill-gotten money to buy the cuckolded spouse
a gift.
From "La femme de Paul" Godard
draws the devastating sense of a nonnegotiable gap between lover and beloved,
despite all their intimacies, and from "La signe," with its cunning exposure
of bourgeois logic, he draws an equally compelling sense of the complacency
into which lovers may retreat as a defense against both this omnipresent
gap and the messy collision of their contrary impulses towards intimacy
with their beloved and maintaining their own independence and individuality.
"La signe" also instances for him role-modeling, as one woman emulates
and imitates another, even one of whom she is contemptuous, before in effect
(by following her advice, it's implied) copying yet another woman. Godard
surely doesn't seem to be paying Maupassant any notice, then, when in fact
he is astutely engaging in literary criticism by drawing identifiable,
interesting chords from the thematic heart of each story--chords that are,
in the case of "La femme de Paul," deeply moving besides.
Pauline Kael, in one of her
best reviews, noted that Godard "gets the little things that people who
have to follow scripts can't get: the differences in the way girls are
with each other and with boys, and boys with each other and with girls."
Indeed, the differences between "masculine" and "feminine," as applied
to these "children of Marx and Coca-Cola," as Godard describes them, is
very much what the film is about. However, these differences still apply,
no matter the distance between us and the sixties. Increasing gender equality
before the law has only served to underscore the difference between identity
and such equality; each gender remains "the other" to the other, to be
approached cautiously or defensively withdrawn from, depending on one's
boldness quotient at the moment.
"Men are from Mars, and women
are from Venus," an American pop psychologist has opined, and although
the schematic categorizing and the stereotyping point to oversimplification,
an element of reality rings in the remark. Of course, such a statement
presupposes the self-certainty, that people of either gender really have
mastered issues of their own identity, which Godard's sophisticated film
everywhere contests. Godard's characters slip into roles; they engage reality
at the protective remove that one mask or another permits. As a result
of its being implicit rather than sentimentally posited, vulnerability
is shown the more exquisitely and poignantly to be at the core of human
nature but only fleetingly apparent.
Both Paul and Madeleine find
role models in their popular culture, as young people still do today. When
we first meet Paul he is seated in a café tossing and catching in
his mouth a cigarette while composing a poem that seems (ambiguously) to
anticipate his own death. It's possible that there's a slight hint here
of the tradition of le poète maudit; but the much stronger, and
contemporary, echo is that of the nouvelle vague itself, especially since
the movement's signature actor, Jean-Pierre Léaud--François
Truffaut's Antoine Doinel in The 400 Blows (1959)--is playing Paul.
(In hommage to this glorious actor, another glorious actor, Keanu Reeves,
thirty years hence does the cigarette toss in Steven Baigelman's nouvelle
vague-ish Feeling Minnesota. Please note, too, that Claude Chabrol's
1959 "New Wave" Les cousins, like Godard's film, owes something
to Maupassant's "La femme de Paul.")
This self-reflexivity is
itself New Wave; the upshot is that we perceive that Paul is in some sense
Jean-Pierre, and vice versa. (This facilitates rather than hampers the
film because what we really know about Léaud, from his films, doesn't
measure up to what we think we know.* The distance between us and Léaud,
for all our movie-house familiarity, becomes correlative to the distance
between Paul and Madeleine.)
By the same token, Madeleine
draws upon the popular culture for her ambition and her image--but from
singing rather than cinema. The Bulgarian-born Sylvie Vartan, an actual
yé-yé singer of the day, appears on a billboard in the film,
her blank expression matched by that of Madeleine. Moreover, one of Vartan's
fellow pop singers, Françoise Hardy, has a cameo in the film. (Brigitte
Bardot, who starred in Godard's 1963 Contempt, has another.) Finally, the
casting of Madeleine's role instances just as much self-reflexivity as
does that of Paul's. The actress playing her, Chantal Goya, was herself
a pop singer who would sustain a career by singing songs for children composed
and written by spouse Jean-Jacques Debout.
Paul's death, as I have said,
is ambiguous. He may have taken an accidental spill off an apartment balcony.
(That's the official story. He fell back over the balcony while taking
photographs of the new apartment he had bought with money he inherited
from his mother.) It may be a suicide--a leap to pavement. This fatal choice
may be the only means, Paul feels, for negotiating the perpetual distance
between himself and Madeleine. Another means would be for him to have murdered
Madeleine; but Paul is a gentle sort and, possibly beneath his adolescent
insecurities, not so egoistic as he seems. The other possibility is that
Madeleine--or, I suppose, someone else--gave the boy a push. The close
of the film finds Madeleine pregnant and responding to a police officer
in a seemingly evasive and suspicious manner. She plays with her hair and
alternately looks at the man questioning her and then off to the left,
as though half in the shared world and half in some reverie of her own.
The film ends with the word
féminin printed on the screen, out of which the first and last two
letters are selected for another word: fin. It is the end of the film,
to be sure, but the shortening of the first word to the second suggests
that Madeleine, the female, has always contained within her, somehow, the
end of her lover, Paul--that women (as the saying goes) will be the death
of men, in the sense of the frustrating effort men make to understand the
women they love and to come together with them. (Of course, given the terms
of this particular film, this automatically means simultaneously that men
will be the death of women.)
A shot pierces the soundtrack;
this is the ultimate note of a film that had begun with two kinds of sounds
punctuating the opening credits: gunshots; someone off-screen whistling
the French national anthem, "La Marseillaise." We later assume that the
whistler is Paul, and that the tune he is whistling bears three distinct
and separate meanings. It is the residue of his just ended military service.
It is irony, for the boy is opposed to the authoritarianism with which
he identifies the state. It is heartfelt expression, for the boy loves
the freedom with which he identifies France--the love of freedom he fears
is ripe for betrayal by government.
In any case, Godard, who
I think to some degree identifies with Paul despite the objectivity of
his filmmaking method, seems to have taken pains to give Paul a life beyond
the limits of his onscreen character. We may say, perhaps, that Paul at
least represents the spirit of restless, radical French youth. But something
else occurs to me of a deeply ironical nature. We never see the policeman;
he is entirely off-screen, and as his questioning recalls Paul's own interviewing
we may in some sense interpret him as Paul's reincarnation--to be precise,
reconstitution--asking, for instance, about something wholly relevant to
the deceased Paul, what Madeleine will do about the fetus she is carrying
and nourishing. Her response is expressed in a coldly playful way: "curtain
rods."
In context, this teasing
contemplation of abortion, besides assaulting the authority of the Catholic
Church in France and therefore, by metaphoric extension, all other authority
such as the government, expresses as well Godard's depth of concern for
the future of France. Indeed, it is in this context that a part of the
film's anti-Americanism is best understood. (Summarily I will take up two
other parts of it.) The protests in the film against American involvement
in Vietnam, far from facilely promoting French superiority over the United
States, bears instead the deeply troubled memory of France's own quagmire
in Indochina, that is, the mess there that the U.S. took over from the
French, and more recently the Algerian War. Algeria had been colonized
by the French in 1848, and Charles de Gaulle's election as France's president
110 years later was predicated on his keeping Algeria French. De Gaulle
had his own contrary agenda, however, and he very slowly withdrew France
from this bloody war, from Algeria, which became independent in 1962.
This is my point: Paul's
transcendence of the limits of mortal characterization has something to
do with his coming after--that is, having eluded--the war; his military
service was in 1965 and 1966. Yet his radicalism seems to come out of France's
experiences in both Indochina and Algeria, the historical memory of which,
borne as a subliminal burden, accounts for some aspect of his personal
(psychological, behavioral) disarray. In a sense, Godard, nearly a generation
older than Paul/Léaud, invests Paul with his own historical memory,
thus making his own survival of Paul an indication of Paul's (somehow)
survival despite the narrative of the film that posits Paul's death as
a point of fact. (This death is never shown; we simply are told about it
out of the blue, shortcircuiting our ability to attach to it any real emotional
weight. Those put off by this Brechtian tendency in Godard betray the degree
to which they are regrettably wedded to the manipulative sentimentalism
of bogus Hollywood "filmmaking.")
Related to this, we may also
say, I think, that Paul in some sense embodies humanity's--and in particular
Godard's--concern over war. Paul in voiceover can be heard among people
at a bookstore asking, "Do you know that a war is going on between the
Iraqis and the Kurds?" One more point needs to be made about the ambiguity
of Paul's death. In the Maupassant story, Paul's suicide is a given. This
might have grated Godard, with its strong sense of omniscient narration,
because human death is more often than not ambiguous and complex. It often
only appears simple. There are at least two more aspects of the film's
anti-Americanism that are worth addressing.
One again has to do with
war. Why, it's often asked, does Godard toss into this film a bit of the
American play Dutchman, by LeRoi Jones (later, Amiri Baraka). Consider
the play's theme: waiting to explode, suppressed African-American rage
against white America. Godard in passing gives voice to this black voice
because he shares Jones's sense of white American oppression of black Americans.
What does this to do with Masculine Feminine? It deepens by association
the protests in the film against the U.S. in Vietnam by suggesting the
racist basis of this bloody involvement.
I love Godard's coup of Brechtian
Chinese boxes, for Dutchman itself is a play whose distancing techniques
encourages thoughtful analysis on the part of the audience, the part that
Godard selects likewise bears this Brechtianism, and the process of selection
that takes out of context a part that can, as here, fairly and honestly
represent the whole encloses the distanced material in another degree or
dimension of distancing. Godard is never so difficult to understand as
it is the case that certain viewers willfully find his work difficult to
understand, although of course both their brilliance and open-endedness
make his films inexhaustible -- impossible ever to grasp fully, hence always
ripe for fresh discoveries.
The other aspect of anti-Americanism
in the film is its portrayal of that shallow and ubiquitous "pop culture"
that's America's largest and most pernicious export. According to Kael,
the film's unifying theme is "the fresh beauty of youth amidst the flimsiness
of Pop culture and Pop politics." I agree in part. Godard takes a more
generous view of youthful political activism than Kael's remark suggests;
he distinguishes between the personality, if not the sanctity, of its idealism
and the frequent immaturity of its expression. He finds it both "fresh"
and "flimsy," as it were, and restless and messily groping. However, the
classicist in him (which will especially come to the fore in his greatest
achievement, the savagely satirical 1967 Weekend) finds it harder
to accept a popular culture that instead of forming a repository for a
nation's, or a continent's, collective values pursues consumerism in order
to exploit a buying public and amass profits--although of course it may
be the case that greed is the only shared value of the corporate United
States. Clearly, Coca-Cola is the symbol for this intrusion into France
of American (pardon the pun) pop, and it's the perfect symbol, too: something
insubstantial that seduces and addicts especially the young, at once, paradoxically,
fueling and sapping their energy--and rotting their teeth.
When Paul cries out, "U.S.,
go home!" it's clear, to us at least, that he wants the U.S. out of European,
including French, culture as much as he wants the U.S. out of Vietnam.
Godard, of course, distinguishes between kinds of Americans and is, for
example, in sympathy with those young Americans protesting their nation's
vicious rampages of slaughter in Southeast Asia. Godard is against tyranny.
Thus he has Paul sing against Hitler, Stalin and Lyndon Johnson, the current
U.S. president, all of whom, he concludes, should be killed--a remark obviously
targeting tyrants in general since Hitler and Stalin were already both
dead.
Reasonably enough, Godard
takes aim, though, only at those elements of intrusive popular culture--a
form of economic neocolonialism where the politics remain hidden--that
serve the interests of tyranny. Thus he provides a scene in a café
(just before Paul's merrily lethal ditty) where Robert, Paul's friend,
speaks of Bob Dylan, about whom Paul is ignorant, describing him as a "Vietnik,"
a war protester, that is, "an American word that comes from beatnik and
Vietnam" and, by the "nik" at the end, as in the case of the word "refusenik,"
that implies (for the moment, two years before Soviet tanks rolled into
Czechoslavakia) a pro-Russian bias. In short, the film distinguishes between
two forms of "pop culture," the exploitive Coca-Cola kind, in pursuit of
nothing but profits and control of markets, and what would become known
at the end of the decade as the counter-culture, courtesy of Berkeley historian
Theodore Roszak's book The Making of a Counter Culture.
It's easy to see why that
the film implies that Madeleine's lightweight singing belongs in the former
category. It's offensively inoffensive, this kind of pointless pop warbling,
and, seducing girls to career ambitions facilitating political apathy,
its sound seems wedded to the blank expression that so often occupies Madeleine's
pretty face--the expression that convinces us at the last that Madeleine
may have murdered Paul. Even so dark a possibility as that--and that's
all it is: a fleeting possibility--contributes to the openness and light-sensitive
nature, if you will, the instability, of youth from which Godard takes,
creates, the style of this amazing and irresistible film. This "style"
brings together, mixes up and merges any number of styles, as is the wont
of the nouvelle vague, whose films seek to share their possibilities with
audiences rather than dictating to audiences.
There is romantic comedy,
the behavioral comedy of the apartment scenes among Paul, Madeleine, Catherine
and Elisabeth, the political patches including the political theater of
the Dutchman episode, the sketches of friendship involving Paul and Robert,
the screwball sexual-verbal sparring between Catherine and Robert, the
parody of Ingmar Bergman's The Silence (1963) in a film-within-the-film
throughout which Paul especially cannot stop talking (this, the sole survivor
of the Swedish "half" of the film's co-production with the French), and
of course the lovely, open-ended incursions into cinéma-vérité
in the interviews that Paul conducts. "Are you happy?" is the question
that sociologist Edgar Morin asked passers-by in Jean Rouch's Chronicle
of a Summer (1961), whose use of a lightweight portable camera--the
"living camera"--has plainly inspired Paul, a budding Jean-Luc Godard.
But certainly, through him,
Godard has as much in mind Le joli Mai (1962), Chris Marker's marvelous
vignette-crammed Parisian essay on the occasion of the end of the Algerian
War, marking France's first breath of peace in nearly a quarter-century.
Is there any "adult" event in (then) recent France as the end of this war
that so matches the sense of possibilities that we and Godard's film identify
with the young? Indeed, Paul's inquiries, as the camera remains on his
interviewee Elsa, draw together a stunning portrait of the openness and
guardedness, the boldness and hesitancy, the certainty and uncertainty,
the prosaic dullness and bewitching, all-flying lyricism and tenderness
of the young. (Some of the conversations between Paul and Madeleine, incidentally,
are shot in the same manner and arrive at the same effect.)
Godard also, however, takes
aim at what he perceives to be the imperiled nature of France's young people.
Elsa, a friend of Madeleine, discloses that the magazine for which she
works, Mademoiselle 19, has named her its representative 19-year-old for
the year--Godard's witty and unexpectedly moving encapsulation of the lightness
and fleeting nature of youth. Paul, typically off-camera, asks her why
she wanted this title, and Elsa explains she hadn't wanted it; rather,
it befell her as a stroke of luck. But the title has apparently reinvented
her identity, for its "advantages"--trips; gifts--have persuaded her not
to go back to college to complete her degree. Paul asks, "So you like having
your car more than your diploma?" to which Elsa replies, "I'm happy because
I have both," meaning a college degree is unnecessary now and her school
diploma sufficient. (We later recall Paul's mention of the car because
his acquisition of a private apartment--his revulsion at being co-opted
unexpectedly by materialism--offers a possible motive for suicide, if indeed
he did choose to end his life.)
But what about the value
of education? Paul presses, "For you, does socialism still have a chance?"
"Oh, you know, I'm not very qualified to answer that," Elsa responds; "I
don't know anything about it." She keeps dodging Paul's attempts to get
her to think and speak, explaining, "I'll get confused," but Paul is like
a hound on a scent, in part because Godard, through this encounter, is
implying that the possibility of socialism in France may depend on Elsa
and on all the nation's Elsas. Paul thus asks her about the difference
between the American way and the socialist way of life, to which she expresses
preference for the American way, preference even for the U.S. over France,
because as Mademoiselle 19 she traveled to the U.S. and somehow found that
women there "play the leading role, you know."
Without losing a jot of his
objective manner, Paul then asks her whether she knows what the word reactionary--implicitly,
the word that sums up the U.S.--means, and Elsa says, "it's being in opposition,
reacting against a lot of things, not accepting just anything that happens."
But the astounding comment of hers comes after when she pronounces reactionaryism
a good thing. Her explanation: "I don't like men who say 'Amen' to everything"--logic
that scarcely supports or defends the position she has taken.
Once we bring together these
(and other) elements of the interview we discern Godard's indictment of
American corruption of French youth, given here the additional slant that,
while being young is identifiable with openness and possibilities, American
influence cancels these, destroying young people in France and thus threatening
to rob France of its future. Masculine Feminine unfolds as a mostly very
gentle film. Neither its tone nor its style suggests the apocalyptic Weekend
ahead,
but the content, once you think about it, is strong stuff.
Léaud, who won as
best actor at Berlin, gives a terrific performance as Paul. Two years hence
his third whack at Antoine Doinel for Truffaut, in Baisers volées
(Stolen Kisses, 1968), suggests a depoliticized version of Paul.
(Both boys, just out of the service, are suddenly looking for themselves
and for romance.) It has often been noted that Paul in Masculine Feminine,
not Antoine in Stolen Kisses, with his bourgeois ambitions, appears
the truer continuation of the troubled 15-year-old Doinel in The 400
Blows, the finest portrait of working-class male adolescence in all
of cinema. In any case, this last film--the first of the three--had already
secured Léaud's place in the pantheon of screen actors, but Masculine
Feminine elicited sighs of pleasure and relief: Léaud, it turned
out, really could act; unlike certain very young stars, he would have a
career. Well, he still has a career, in the process of which he has become
without doubt the single most beloved film actor in sound films. Over the
years Léaud may have put on a few pounds, reminding us all what
a stocky youngster he was when Truffaut introduced us to his own alter
ego nearly 45 years ago, but he remains a phenomenal actor. He has triumphed
for both Godard (La Chinoise; Weekend; Detective) and Truffaut (Bed
and Board; Two English Girls) on many occasions, but he has been no
less amazing, perhaps even more so, for Jacques Rivette (Out 1: Spectre),
Jean Eustache (The Mother and the Whore), Philippe Garrel (The
Birth of Love) and Olivier Assayas (Irma Vep). I would not want
to know anyone who doesn't cherish the acting and screen persona of Jean-Pierre
Léaud.
Apart from that, it's left
to us to celebrate Godard, one of the preeminent humanists of western cinema,
the one classicist who was also a Romantic, the impossible rare exception
to the rule of these mutually exclusive designations. Some have bemoaned
the loss of political perspective in his films; it is simply the case that
Godard, unlike some of his audience, has moved on--not to territory any
better or worse than in the past, but to the territory most in need at
the moment of his indefatigable exploration. Goodness! The man has made
some 75 films. With his contradictory nature, Godard is, even Godard knows,
a chore at times; his art can be difficult. But its rewards--well, see
Masculine
Feminine for the first time or the fiftieth. In black-and-white, it
remains one of the art form's treasures.
* What do we know about film
actors, even those we think we know? In the late 1980s film critic Andrew
Sarris mistakenly wrote in the States that Jean-Pierre was dead. I remember
telling two friends who also loved his work--"Oh no!" one of them uttered
in sad disbelief--and later learned that, like me, the other two, all three
of us independently, had surmised that Léaud's death was a suicide.
Léaud, of course, wasn't dead at all; but all of us suspected the
same cause for the death Sarris (and, by way of him, I) had reported. Thankfully,
Jean-Pierre Léaud is still with us. But not all of us. The one whose
exclamation I have quoted above less than a month ago passed from this
earth.
©
Dennis Grunes 2003
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