Film Review
With his third and final feature,
Coup
pour coup, director Marin Karmitz completes a trilogy of films
that now offer a blistering insight into the social unrest that was
endemic in France (if not the whole western world) in the late 1960s,
culminating in the national protests by workers and students in May
1968. Being a prominent leftwing activist, Karmitz naturally sided
with the oppressed masses and so it is no surprise that his films are a
flagrant assault on bourgeois capitalism. His first film,
Sept jours ailleurs (1969),
presented an individual's private rebellion against the sterility of
bourgeois conformity, and in his next film,
Camarades (1970), Karmitz argued
his case that only through collective action could the lot of
individual working class men and women be improved.
Coup pour coup is the logical
end-point of Karmitz's Maoist-leaning thesis, showing how the system
that favours the few by exploiting the many can be effectively
emasculated by ordinary workers acting in unison for their own best
interests.
Today, the premise of Karmitz's film appears staggeringly naive.
We have seen, over the four decades since it was made, what happens
when workers attempt to take on their bosses in the way shown in the
film. The bosses simply call in the riot police, close down the
factory and move to countries where the labour force is cheaper and far
less likely to cause trouble.
Coup
pour coup reeks of the complacent leftwing Utopianism to which
socialist/communist/Maoist intellectuals nailed their colours in the
late '60s, early '70s, but, despite this obvious shortcoming, it is
still a fascinating film, one that serves as a revealing sociological
document of its time.
It is hard to discuss
Coup pour coup
without referencing a similar, more high profile, film which came out
just a few months after its release - namely Jean-Luc Godard's
Tout
va bien (1972). Both films depict a strike by militant
factory workers determined to put their bosses in their place, and both
have an unmistakable leftwing, anti-capitalist bias. But whereas
Godard's film feels turgidly theoretical, Karmitz's film is intensely
involving, using emotion rather than laboured intellectual reasoning to
convince us of the righteousness of the workers' cause.
There is a humanity to Karmitz's film that is almost totally
lacking in Godard's bleaker, far more scathing assault on capitalism.
One of the more interesting aspects of
Coup pour coup is that it was
itself a collective venture, in which the director worked in
collaboration with his cast of almost entirely non-professional actors
(mostly women employed in jobs similar to those depicted in the
film). Scenes were improvised and filmed with considerable input
from the cast, and, as a consequence, the film has a trenchant realism
and emotional pull that Godard's film tacitly lacks. Even when
the strikers end up openly flouting the law and begin subjecting their
employer to humiliating treatment, we remain on their side. How
can we not, having seen how they themselves were humiliated and
exploited earlier in the film, by an unsympathetic boss who treats them
worse than cattle?
Another thing that
Coup pour coup
achieves which Godard's film doesn't is to drive home the degree of
resentment and alienation felt by ordinary working people in the early
1970s. May 1968 had come and gone and nothing had improved.
There had been a general election, a change of president, but the
masses were still, as ever, toiling under the tight-fitting yoke of
bourgeois capitalism. By using real workers in his film, and
forcing us to identify with them, Karmitz gives us an insight into the
depth of anti-capitalist feeling that was rife at the time (and became
further aggravated as the decade progressed).
It is to the film's detriment that it is so unflinchingly
one-sided. Capitalism is the Big Bad Wolf and anyone who thinks
otherwise is an apologist for the evil parasites running the world -
that's the impression Karmitz conveys. The factory owner is a
laughably shallow caricature - as his workers rise up and take over his
factory he is seen sipping wine in the garden of his pristine mansion,
looking like Louis XVI during the storming of the Bastille. Named
Boursac (which roughly translates as Moneybags), he isn't a person,
just a crude emblem of capitalism. When he is taken prisoner it
is not sympathy he elicits but a feeling of gratification, of the kind
that spectators at a witch burning might once have experienced.
Karmitz's reluctance or inability to give capitalism a human face
exposes the film's naivety and one-sidedness. His film is
certainly easier to engage with than Godard's more considered but dryly
intellectual
Tout va bien,
but it is just as deficient in its glib assertion that the forces of
capitalism can be tamed by collective action by the uneducated
masses. Wishful thinking it may be but
Coup pour coup is a film that
continues to have an alarming resonance. How can it not when the
injustices it depicts - workers treated as little more than slaves by a
money-grubbing 'superior' class - are just as prevalent today?
But the workers' supposed victory at the end of the film is no more
than a delusional fantasy, the stuff of socialist dreams and naive
communist propaganda. Capitalism is the Moloch of our time - and
we have all made it so. So much for the dreams of '68...
© James Travers 2015
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