Film Review
Running to 27 minutes,
Les Mystères du château de Dé
is the longest of the dozen or so films to be made by the prominent surrealist
artist Man Ray. It is also, arguably, his most beguiling and philosophical
film, the fullest embodiment of his so-called
Cinéma Pur aesthetic.
A companion piece to its author's previous short film
L'Étoile de mer (1928),
a bitter and poignant ode to the ephemeral nature of romantic love,
Les
Mystères is a haunting evocation of the twin terrors of our existence
- the transience of life and the role that chance plays in the grand scheme
of things.
By the time he made this film, Man Ray (whose real name was Emmanuel Radnitzky)
had become a prominent member of the Parisian avant-garde, having settled
in France in 1921 after a successful start to his career as a painter and
photographer in his native America. The film was financed by the wealthy
Vincomte de Noailles, who allowed it to be shot on the grounds of his large
villa at Hyères in the south of France. An avid sponsor of avant-garde
artists, de Noailles also supported two other notable surrealist films of
this period - Luis Buñuel's
Un
chien andalou (1929) and Jean Cocteau's
Le Sang d'un poète
(1930).
After an introductory caption,
Les Mystères du château de
Dé boldly asserts that 'A throw of the dice will never abolish
chance'. This is taken from the poem 'Un coup de dés jamais
n'abolira le hasard' by Stéphane Mallarmé, a 19th century French
poet who was a leading figure in the symbolist movement. This notion
that chance is an essential keystone of reality acquired a scientific foundation
in the mid-1920s when Schrödinger, Heisenberg, Dirac and others came
up with a coherent formulation of the theory of quantum mechanics, which has
since become a bedrock of modern science.
'God does not play dice' Albert Einstein once famously asserted, but Man
Ray (an unlikely proponent of quantum physics) disagrees. Every action
performed by any human being in
Les Mystères is preceded by
a throw of the dice. The film establishes its randomness theme at the
outset with a shot of a hand of a wooden mannequin holding two dice. (What
should we conclude from the fact that the dice are held by an inanimate object?)
There is no escape from the randomness that is imposed on us. Our lives
may seem to follow a steady course from cradle to grave, but in truth they
consist of an almost limitless series of decision points, each offering a
myriad of possible future outcomes. It is not the 'what is' that most
defines our lives, but rather the far more enticing 'what might be' - the
infinite possibilities that lie before us.
Two later films that look as if they might have been inspired by this idiosyncratic
short are Alain Resnais's
L'Année dernière
à Marienbad (1961) and Chris Marker's
La Jetée (1962), which both
offer similarly poetic meditations on the close relationship between time
and memory. The mysterious nature of the titular château is conveyed
to us by a hypnotic montage of tracking shots where the camera pans slowly
across the field of view (both horizontally and vertically), a technique
that Resnais frequently employed on his early films. Longer tracking
shots within the château, taking us from room to room, often with the
camera at virtually ground level, add to the growing sense of eeriness, and
the absence of the residence's human inhabitants becomes unaccountably disturbing.
Resnais achieves the same effect in the same way in
Marienbad,
as does Stanley Kubrick in his classic horror movie
The Shining (1980).
When the villa's absent residents are revealed to us - with a dramatic suddenness
- their faces are concealed by stockings. They have no separate identities,
they are merely marionettes governed by the workings of chance. They
exist for a while, amusing themselves with their wild gymnastic exhibitionism,
and then they are gone. Their presence lingers in the now deserted
mausoleum like a faint lingering echo, which is given a visual representation
in the brief coda that ends the film. A couple arrive at the villa
and, after another throw of the dice, resolve to stay. They embrace
and are transformed into statues.
Once again, the workings of chance are made apparent in a final shot of the
hands of the wooden mannequin, which reveal two dice that are then allowed
to fall down into the void. And so the game of life goes on, the hand
of chance collapsing one wave function after another to cut a single path
- our perceived reality - through the endless forest of possibilities.
© James Travers 2002
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Man Ray film:
Poison (1935)
Film Synopsis
The hand of a carved wooden mannequin holds a pair of dice, as if to remind
us of Stéphane Mallarmé's words: 'A throw of the dice
will never abolish chance'. At St Bernard in a picturesque spot of
southern France there stands a modern villa built upon the ruins of an ancient
castle. Far away in Paris, two men wearing stocking masks throw dice
and decide to set out on their journey. They drive across open French
countryside and arrive at the villa, to find it totally deserted. The
rooms are tastefully adorned with pieces of modern art, but where are the
villa's inhabitants?
In a forgotten corner, four recumbent young people, all wearing stocking
masks, are throwing dice. The outcome of the game leads them to head
to an indoor swimming pool, where they amuse themselves for a while, swimming
and participating in gymnastic displays. This flurry of activity ends
suddenly when the four young people fade from view like ghosts, and once
again the villa is deserted. The next day, a man and a woman arrive
at the deserted villa. They happen upon the dice and this determines their
fate. They choose to spend the night in the château, but transformed
into statues they end up staying for eternity...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.