Thursday, January 13, 2011

Jan 13: Hôtel des Amériques/Hotel America (1981-- Andre Techine)

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I just didn't like this movie even though I really wanted to.

It has a lot going for it. I like the editing, the compression of the story; I'm alway appreciative of a movie that shows someone walking to a car and cuts to driving, sparing me having to sit through the predictable door opening, key insertion, blah, blah. And like in Temoins, there's engaging psychology here and what is, for me, the frankness about relationships. Hélène is complicate, Gilles is complicated and even minor characters like the sister, the gay postal guy and the two women friends of Hélène are complicated. And lots of the visual is nice, from Catherine Deneuve to her primary-colored wardrobe and the views of Biarritz from the perspective of a local.

The problem I couldn't get past was the blockiness of the narrative. Hélène is distant, then vulnerable, then suffering in mad love; Gilles is sweet, then depressed, then crazy. There are too many big jumps and jolts in the movie. In the later Temoins, there are also jumps and empty places in the narrative and portrayal of the characters, but these gaps aren't so far or abrupt that my experience would keep me from filling them in. Here, though, there is so much distance in the jumps that a scene loses touch with the previous, a mood or attitude loses touch with the previous, so there's no overall arc or unity. Maybe the movie just tries to cover too much story and character development in too short a period of time, but I caught myself thinking "What!?" more often than a viewer should have. And the hackneyed music doesn't help matters.

Sixteen years before Temoins, Techine is already looking at some of the same themes: the difficulty of expressing and realizing love, the persistence of love after loss, the pain that accompanies love, and the complexity of individuals' psychology and desire. There are also gay characters, openly interacting with straight society (though out of the main narrative here), and there's even cruising in a park.

Techine does a much better job of controlling the range and gaps in is films in the later Temoins than in this one, and that's a pity. I would have liked to know Hélène an Gilles as well as I know Sarah and Adrien.

And was I in France in 1981? Those narrow ties brought back some uncomfortable memories of my life at the apex of fashion.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Jan 12: Les temoins/The Witnesses (Andre Techine--2007)

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Not sure why this movie hasn't gotten more note; David Jones recommended it to me, so I checked it out.

And loved it. Touched seeing on screen the frankness of so many parts of gay life I've been familiar with: cruising, younger/older, AIDS, gay/bi interface, gay (male)/straight (female), dealing with being gay, love...even the quotidian details involved with transporting the body. And like so many French films, this one deals so (refreshingly) frankly with sex, love and relationships. I know of no other national cinema that can look love so directly in the face and not blink.

Film is not only direct, but it leaves so much unexplained. Michel Blanc's fully-realized Adrian is touching, loving Manu as a mentor but also desiring him, but the others are harder to see into. Mehdi totally loves Manu and Sarah, Manu loves Adrian as well as Mehdi, Sarah loves Mehdi, Adrian and her writing. And the movie explores none of this in an analytical way. In fact, Adrian moves on, Mehdi moves on, Sarah writes the movie and even Manu's sister Julie moves on.

All are touched by the episode with Manu and carry him with them, but their lives continue. Ironically, it's probably Sarah who most honors Manu.

The film observes all these relationships -- no interpretation, no analysis -- so we follow what we see: surface, in a keenly observed context. I'm impressed at Techine's way of portraying such intense, complicated relationships and think I'm going to watch more of his films.

Thanks, David!



Shaun the Sheep (Aardman Animations)

Jan 9: Lady Vengeance (Park, Chan wook--2005)

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Jan 7: Old Boy (Park, Chan wook--2003)

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Jan 5: Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance (Park, Chan wook--2002)

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Jan 3-11 -- Gaumont Treasures 1897-1913 (Guy, Feuillade, Perret)

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