"Experience has taught that we never learn anything about a film by
visiting the set... We can capture an atmosphere, a way of being and
acting, trying to discern intentions, but we never get a complete or
tangible impression." So says Olivier Séguret somewhere around the
midpoint of his
lengthy article in Libération recounting his visit to the Swiss set of Jean Luc-Godard's upcoming 3-D feature,
Farewell to Language.
So why bother writing one at all? Well, his show-stopping 3-D short
The Three Disasters certainly
stoked the appetite of cinephiles for even non-news about his upcoming
companion feature. But more importantly, even if we don't learn anything
about the film from a visit to Godard's house, we can learn some pretty
amusing and/or fascinating stuff about Godard himself, notably the way
that, at almost 83 years old, he's embracing new technology with the
curiosity and spirit of someone a quarter of his age.
Click
through for several more highlights (translated from French) from the
article, and then stick around for new briefs from Denmark, London and
Spain, as well as the latest European box office report!
1. Your home movies probably have a bigger crew than Godard. According to the article, the entire crew for the film consists of, "the director and his two, two ... Two what? Together, Jean-Paul and Fabrice Battaggia Aragno are assistants, managers, production managers, script supervisors, secretaries, costumers, technicians, editors, cinematographers, sound engineers, responsible also for restaurants, taxis, money and water bottles."
2. Your home movies are probably made on the same cameras Godard uses. Today, Séguret notes, Godard is shooting on a 3-D camera he made himself, which basically consists of two digital SLR cameras mounted on a board, one right-side up, one upside down. However, the writer also catalogs his stockpile of other equipment for the film. To wit: "Flip-cams and go-pro cameras, video smartphones, big and small DSLR cameras and video devices, computers..."
3. There are characters. They will be nude. The first part is significant because Godard's last 3-D foray, did not actually have characters. Unless you count the shots of Godard himself, or his dog. The second part is significant because, well, this is the internet. The writer notes that the weather report predicts a tropical day in Switzerland, which he says is perfect because both present actors will have to get nude that day. The actors in question are Zoe Bruneau (above) and Richard Chevallier, who play "the couple." Another pair of actors play the same characters later in the film, but in different space-time, naturally.
4. Good luck making sense of those characters! According to the article, "As often in Godard films, the film pulls together literary fragments, lectures on world politics, found images (photos, paintings, extracts of films) and an intimate story." As for the title, Godard himself says, "The title is mysterious, and I think it will remain that way."
5. Godard has a jingle to start each shot. He tells the actors, "3 seconds after I say 'Go,' go! So... Go!" (It sounds more like a jingle in French) He ends each shot by saying "Very good, let's redo it." But he rarely does more than three or four takes.
6. Godard's longtime partner, writer/director Anne-Marie Mieville, is not directly on set... or is she? Séguret compares Anne-Marie's name in conversation to a "personal punctuation" for Godard. On this particular day, he writes, "She is apparently several hundred meters a way in a close house, the location of which, I will not look for... like a magnetic force that acts on Godard, who plays the role of the clock. Phrases exchanged by the actors might as well be exchanges between Godard and her."
7. Godard thinks the whippersnappers still don't get it. When asked about why 3-D is only used in vulgar, dull ways, Godard responded, "Young filmmakers are not interested in technology, they just know what a camera is, and then what two [cameras] are... They don't reflect on what the camera does, it sees."
In Brief
A pioneer in new Spanish cinema, Elias Querejeta, has passed away at the age of 78. Previously a soccer player, Querejeta produced some of the most influential Spanish films of the last fifty years, including Spirit of the Beehive, Cria Cuervos and Mama Turns 100. Rest in peace.
1864, a film spun off from the most expensive Danish television series of all time which chronicles the Danish-Dutch civil war, seems like it should probably be a Danish production, right? Wrong. Apparently the film commissioner doesn't like the script and the other major funding body is concerned because the tv show will have already aired. So now this chronicle of Danish history is a Norwegian production!
Controversial Cannes Palm D'or Winner Blue is the Warmest Color will apparently not be France's submission to the Oscars this year because of its release date.
Box Office
We're in the throes of summer, which means that U.S. blockbusters are continuing to dominate Europe. Last frame Man of Steel took the number one spot in almost every single territory. However, in Denmark, it was closely challenged by Player, which stars Casper Christensen of Klown fame. It took the number two spot by a pretty small margin. Meanwhile, Germany and Portugal got Monsters University instead of Man of Steel, so they ceded the number one position to that franchise instead. And finally, poor Sweden didn't get either film, and so they apparently all went to see The Internship, which won the last box office frame.