What is Hollywood, you ask, dear children? A quorum of whores babbling endlessly on about fucking while the bordello is razed for a penny arcade -- Paul Bern
Showing posts with label Marguerite Duras. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marguerite Duras. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

BLONDE ON BLONDE


Imperium is an intelligible sphere whose centre is everywhere and whose circumference is nowhere.

Right now, as Pan-Europe and China inaugurate a new humanitarian era of post-modern ipod colonialism, to look at Denis' film as a post-colonial treatise is not so interesting. After all, Denis, like Duras before her, is one of those cosmic colons. The psychological mestizo. On its surface, White Material just seems the usual meme about "Africa" -- Conrad, Casement, Kurtz, Camus, and Kapuscinski.

But no...some kind of allegory about Madonna and the kids from Malawi. But also a bit like Winchester 73, a dream version but with several rifles flying at once. Some fundamental lyric balance between the persons in the drama. Like Jancso in Cameroon. The power never has a center or a color. It flows, Bressonian, from person to thing and back. The blonde hair (Denis' own, let's remember) -- the immune system of the various bodies reject it. The mother's perverse and fixed dedication to the land, identification with the land, like in Duras, only points up the fleeting mobility, the insouciance of the other agents. Only Capital makes the land visible, and lovable.

At the end of the film, the surprise after many red herrings is that she, despite herself, must become the toxic Dostoyevskian avenger. La Prisionniere du Desert. Rather ambiguous stuff, this.

Besides -- who is not a colonized subject these days...? To compete for the honor of most colonized, or most abject seems beside the point -- one of those classic nasty + pointless fights for low stakes.Let us pass over it in silence.

Friday, January 28, 2011

THE MALADY OF LOCATION

Pialat: Dressing a location is, of course, a necessity. You always have to do it at the last minute and too late. If I were shooting in this room, I'd start by moving this table, I'd arrange these chairs in a different manner, and little by little I'd arrive at the tableau, at artifice...    

Duras: Don't bother to go to Calcutta, to Melbourne, to Vancouver, it's all in the Yvelines, in Neauphle. Everything is everywhere. Everything is in Trouville. Melbourne and Vancouver are in Trouville. Don't bother to go looking for what you can find on the spot. There are always on-the-spot places that are looking for movies; all you need is to see them. 

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

THE MOTHER OF THE GAME


That rather pleasant & dense pastiche of Bava offered as a mini-movie made of modest peccorino in the middle of the dead space that is Silent Hill points up the slo-mo schemata which the film's promotional business must dutifully undertake: the exploration of the different game set/locations, exposition of the incoherent, opaque trauma mythology, broken and twisted by the moments of "action", the pronouncing of stilted dialogue purchased at discount from some fairyland subaltern christianity, the off-sound design, etc.

It all reveals what the genre is at pains to conceal...that the laughing spirit behind the game movie is the anti-cinema of Marguerite Duras. 

Next from Konami, India Song: Monsoon of Blood... The lepers outside, drawn by the melancholy strains of India Song, storm the Residence de France. When they erupt in the languid heat, the flesh of the guests starts sloughing off when touched by the Other. The Vice-Consul drags Anne-Marie Stretter through the mirror to a bedroom where they finally make love for what seems like 30 years. Using her name of Venice, (which is, somehow, the key to everything) The Vice-Consul calls up a platoon of dead paratroopers from Dien Bien Phu to assist him in the fight against the lepers to take back the mansion, level by level, howling with profoundest melancholy the whole time.