Film Review
It was in the summer of 1958, six months before the French New Wave fired
its opening salvo with Claude Chabrol's
Le Beau Serge (1959), that
Jacques Rivette began shooting his first film,
Paris nous appartient.
Not yet ready to give up his day job as a critic, Rivette worked on the film,
on and off, for the next three years, treating it more as a hobby than a
commercial enterprise. He only managed to complete it with the financial
support of his close colleagues on
Les Cahiers du cinéma, François
Truffaut and Claude Chabrol.
By the time Rivette's film was finally released in France, towards the end
of 1961, Truffaut and Chabrol had both made a number of films and had become
leading figures of what had come to be known as the French New Wave.
But, already, the tide seemed to have turned. Truffaut's
Tirez sur le pianiste
(1960) and Chabrol's
Les Bonnes
Femmes (1960) had been ill-received by critics and audiences, and
Rivette's film arrived just when La Nouvelle Vague looked as if it had run
its course.
Paris nous appartient came and went with virtually
no one noticing. It wasn't until he made his next film - the highly
controversial
La Religieuse
(1966) - that Jacques Rivette established himself as a director.
It is a curious thing that the least commercially successful of the French
New Wave directors, and the one who found it most difficult to get started,
should be the one who remained most true to the spirit of the Nouvelle Vague
throughout his career.
Paris nous appartient isn't so much a
thoughtfully conceived piece of cinema as a template for the kind of films that Truffaut, Chabrol,
Godard and Rivette would put their names to at the start of their careers
- and you could legitimately describe it as the most Nouvelle Vague film
of them all.
It's a nebulous, dawdling, frustrating mess of a film, low in plot but positively
awash with the kind of blatant intellectual navel-gazing that only the New
Wave directors could pass off as high art. It is because Rivette made
the film so cheaply that it looks like it does, with all the characteristics
(good and bad) that we associate with La Nouvelle Vague. Lacking the
polish of contemporary commercial films, it can hardly help feeling more
strongly evocative of the era in which it was made. Truffaut's
Les 400 coups (1959),
Chabrol's
Les Bonnes femmes (1960) and Godard's
À
bout de souffle (1960) all look as if they may have been strongly
influenced by this film - in ways that are both obvious and subtle.
Rivette may have been late reaching the cinema, but it's a fair bet that
he originated the look and feel of the French New Wave.
Rivette's dissatisfaction with
Paris nous appartient may well explain
why he reworked much of the content of this film in two later (far
better) works -
L'Amour fou
(1969) and
Out 1
(1971). Far longer these two films may be (mindbogglingly so in the
case of
Out 1), but they have a coherence and solidity that Rivette's
first feature manifestly lacks.
Paris nous appartient looks
like a Frankenstein documentarist's insane attempt to combine two seemingly
incompatible genres: the city symphony - exemplified by Alberto Cavalcanti's
Rien que les heures (1926)
- and the trashy political thriller. An ordinary-looking girl named
Anne (played by a winsome Betty Schneider, in her last but one screen role)
wanders around Paris, seemingly on a quest to find a missing audio tape,
and becomes embroiled in a murderous intrigue which may or may not be part
of an international conspiracy. Along the way, she gets roped into
a beatnik production of
Pericles and falls in with a totally paranoiac
writer who covers his bedroom wall with Pac-Man-like doodles. It sounds
like the kind of scenario a bored teenager would scribble in the back of
an exercise book.
Paris nous appartient never looks like a film that was planned to
happen. Rather, it looks like some neglected plant that just kept on growing,
sending tendrils out in every direction. It is a random walk across
the geographical and cultural landscape of Paris in the late 1950s, its own
haphazard production humorously mirrored by the chaotic production of the
stage play within the film. The film's patchwork feel (the result of
its piecemeal production) gives it an unreal, almost dreamlike quality, which
jars with the almost documentary-style of filming that Rivette employs throughout,
shooting scenes in natural light in real locations around the capital, most
likely with the cast improvising a fair chunk of their lines.
The film's darkly oppressive tone (which comes in part from an ominous percussive
score but also manifests itself in the lighting and camera angles) is far
more redolent of 1950s America than 1960s France. In place of the juvenile
optimism and playfulness that we find in the early films of Rivette's New
Wave contemporaries, there is an unremitting sense of gloom and paranoia.
Rivette picks up on the first glimmerings of youth alienation, a deeply rooted
mistrust of authority and institutions that would fester in France throughout
the 1960s, culminating in the public protests of 1968 that would bring to
an end the De Gaulle presidency. This is not something we notice in
the early films of Truffaut, Chabrol and Godard. Rivette was setting the
agenda - the others merely followed.
Paris nous appartient anticipates both the film noir claustrophobia
of Godard's later
Alphaville
(1965) and bitter melancholy of Truffaut's
La Peau douce (1964) (not
to mention Chabrol's now reviled espionage thrillers). It does have
a few lighter moments (including a humorous aside with Jean-Luc Godard flirting
with another customer in a pavement café), but it is the film's overarching
aura of grimness that prevails. Even the title has a dark sense of
irony about it. Who exactly does 'nous' refer to - the forward-thinking
post-war generation who intend claiming France for themselves, or some shady
consortium of establishment string-pullers that seeks to control the masses
for their own ends? In truth it belongs to no one. The
city that Rivette captures in his film is one that needs no master and is
unlikely ever to submit to one. It is a living entity in its own right,
tolerant of the human parasite that crawls all over its skin but never subservient
to it. To quote Péguy (as the film does, at the end of the opening
credits):
Paris belongs to no one.
© James Travers 2016
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Jacques Rivette film:
La Religieuse (1966)
Film Synopsis
Paris, June 1957. Anne Goupil, a student from the provinces, is half-heartedly
revising for her exams when she finds herself drawn into an intrigue revolving
around the death of a Spanish musician named Juan. Terry, the dead
man's mistress, is satisfied that Juan committed suicide, but Philip Kaufman,
an American writer driven from his homeland by the McCarthy witch-hunts,
is convinced his death was politically motivated. Anne then meets Gérard
Lenz, a struggling theatre director who is rehearsing a shoestring production
of Shakespeare's
Pericles. It was whilst composing music for
this play that Juan died in mysterious circumstances. Gérard
offers Anne a part in the play and she gladly accepts. Looking increasingly
paranoid, Philip does his utmost to convince Anne that Juan was murdered
- or at least driven to suicide - on discovering an international plot.
Terry is also aware of the plot and if she lets Gérard in on the secret
he is sure to be the next victim...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.