Film Review
Jean-Luc Godard's second full-length film after the ground-breaking and highly praised
À bout de souffle (1960)
was
Le Petit soldat, his first political film, centred around the Algerian conflict.
His direct approach, which included some potentially
inflammatory rhetoric and a disturbing torture scene, was too much for the censors and
the film, made in 1960, was banned, being released only in 1963 once the war with Algeria
had ended.
Technically, it is probably Godard's most conventional film, bearing a stronger resemblance
to the works of Jean-Pierre Melville, with its dark underworld overtones, than his own
subsequent films. Many of the ingredients we associate with Godard can be glimpsed
in this film, in embryo form. These include Raoul Coutard's mesmerising, fluid camera
work, and some lengthy unscripted scenes where the director relies on his actors to create
their own dialogue. These typically Godardesque devices create a refreshing sense
of spontaneity which is lacking from conventional cinema.
One place where this unfamiliar spontaneity works most effectively is in the famous torture
scene. What is most disturbing about this long scene is not the violence which is
employed but the every-day manner in which the torture is applied to Bruno by his tormentors.
The banality of the surroundings (a hotel room) and the way in which Godard shoots the
scene (with no display of emotion, either on the side of the victim or torturers) lends
the film a sickening sense of realism that transcends existentialism. This is probably
the most shocking scene of any of Godard's films, one which the critics were quick to
condemn when the film was finally released.
Another obvious target for the critics, particularly those of a left-wing political disposition,
was the film's trenchant apolitical stance. The film makes no attempt to distinguish
between extreme right and left wing politics, both are equally as valid or equally as
flawed in Godard's eyes. This is reflected in the political ambiguity of the central
character Bruno Forestier, who resorts to right-wing terrorism not because he necessarily
believes in right-wing politics but because he needs a cause to believe in. Since
the Second World War, his country, France, has lost its political ideology, which is why
France is destined to lose the Algerian war.
This was indeed an accurate reflection
of the mood in France at the time the film was made but was clearly not a view which the
authorities were going to allow Godard to peddle in public cinemas, hence the enforced ban.
Despite its strong political tone, the film also has a compelling sense of humanity, reflected
in the apparent innocence of Veronica, beautifully portrayed by Anna Karina (an actress
who would feature in many of Godard's subsequent films). The ambiguous nature of
her relationship with Bruno, who is clearly attracted to her, adds another tragic dimension
to the film. Played magnificently by Michel Subor, Bruno himself is a flawed idealist
who represents a generation of young French people looking for meaning in their lives
in a world without ideology or purpose. In Bruno, Godard reflects the popular unrest
which would create major ructions on the French political scene in later years, culminating
in the 1968 riots.
© James Travers 2001
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Jean-Luc Godard film:
Les Carabiniers (1963)
Film Synopsis
It is 1958, at the height of France's war with Algeria. A deserter from the French
army, Bruno Forestier, belongs to an extreme right-wing terrorist cell operating in Geneva.
To prove his credentials, he must assassinate a Swiss journalist who is collaborating
with a rival left-wing group supporting the Algerian terrorists, the FLN. Along
the way, Bruno meets and falls in love with Veronica, whom he mistakes for a model when
she is in truth in league with the left-wing activists...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.