Film Review
Notre Musique, Jean-Luc Godard's latest cinematic offering is a sobering yet somewhat
opaque, almost surreal, meditation on human existence. Adopting the three-part structure
of Dante's The Divine Comedy, the film comprises a lengthy middle section - appropriately
entitled Purgatory - in which writers and artists exchange thoughts ranging from the profound
to the laughably pretentious, sandwiched between two short sections which show us a vision
of Hell and Heaven. As ever, Godard makes no attempt to rationalise his work on
screen or even to draw the threads of his ideas into a coherent whole. Instead,
he invites us to pause and reflect on the state of the world and draw our own interpretation,
to make our own conclusions.
Whilst it lacks the artistic, stylistic and narrative coherence of Godard's previous
great works,
Notre musique is nonetheless a work that is strangely compelling.
It is not so much a film as a piece of abstract art or a special kind of lens that allows
us to look at the world around us and see things in possibly a new light. Can there
be meaning in the apparent meaninglessness that is war, this endless obsession that human
beings have for obliterating one another? Palestine and Israel illustrate the duality
which lies at the heart of human consciousness: the desire for peace achieved through
interminable war. One is light, the other darkness. Without one, the other
would not exist. Without Hell, there could be no Heaven.
After a spectacular
opening montage which conveys not just the sheer horror of war but also man's sickening
obsession with images of war, the film's rambling middle section is mildly off-putting.
The spectator is bombarded with political and philosophical observations, and it's hard
to keep up and separate the wheat from the chaff. The static, unimaginative photography
doesn't help, and after a while it really does feel like you are in purgatory, having
to endure the endless empty rhetoric of a group of ineffectual, self-important free-thinkers.
Yet, although stylistically weak, even this part of the film holds our attention, provoking
us to take stock and gather our thoughts. The world is a mess, humanity is a mess,
but the re-birth of a war-scarred Sarajevo offers a ray of hope for the future.
But can Godard be right in supposing that the Heaven we all crave is policed by American
soldiers? If it ends the grief, the hate and the carnage, wouldn't it be worth it?
© James Travers 2006
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Jean-Luc Godard film:
Film socialisme (2010)
Film Synopsis
Hell: images of war, some real, others cinematic recreations, some portraying the brutality
and carnage, others glorifying this most universal of human pursuits. Purgatory:
a literary conference in Sarajevo, where filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard discusses the relationship
between text and image. He exchanges ideas with a Spanish writer, Juan Goytisolo,
a Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwich and Judith Lerner, a young Israeli journalist, amongst
others. Paradise: Olga, a young student girl who was killed during a hostage drama
in Jerusalem, finds herself in a verdant paradise, which is guarded by US marines.
She is at peace.
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.