sovay: (Rotwang)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2007-09-11 12:52 am

Just casually appearing from the clock across the hall

My father and I watched La Jetée (1962) this afternoon. I had been cautioned that it might not be as impressive as its reputation, but I found it incredibly haunting, one of the most beautiful things I have seen on a screen: it has the same kind of imperative starkness as The Seventh Seal, things that are so tightly concentrated in themselves that they become both self and symbol; the story is very simple, but it's the simplicity of something essential.

The year is unspecified; the calendar stopped with World War III and there is now only peacetime, which means before the war, and the present, which is subterranean, radioactive, blasted and dissociated; like photographs of Berlin in 1945. There is not even enough of society for a dystopia. There is a man who has been selected for certain mysterious experiments because of a childhood memory that has imprinted on him like a silver fixative: the pier at Orly, a woman's face, a man falling, himself as a small boy staring at these disparate fragments and only realizing years later that he had watched a man die. The experiments are time travel. The planet is dying; space is unreachable; humanity's only salvation lies in the future or the past. Projecting him back toward that lodestone memory, his experimenters are attempting to unstick him from time; the common results are death or madness, but with him they succeed. He opens his eyes in that year of his childhood. He speaks with the woman. She calls him her ghost. They begin an affair in the nonlinear scraps of days and moments before the war that he is constantly shuttled back and forth between. But the goal of the experiments is not the past, it is the future, and he has no place in the present.

All of which is told—with the exception of a few precious, unexpected seconds—in still black-and-white photographs, like a scrapbook of this future history, striking, slightly grainy, sometimes flawlessly and sometimes haphazardly shot; like discrete pieces of memory, strung like the protagonist from one moment to the next. The world is full of frozen ghosts. We are never allowed to live in the movement. It's an amazing effect. And it completely disjoints the basic language of film: all of a sudden those twenty-four frames a second do not equate to seamless vision, but to a progression of discontinuities which the spoken narrative guides, but which the viewer must still fill in for themselves in order for the story to make sense. Even for the French New Wave, seeing La Jetée for the first time must have been like having someone unscrew the top of your head and drop in a handful of slides. It was a good thing to see.

Memory is important. My great-aunt, although she was never referred to as anything other than "Aunt Joy," died this morning. I had met her once that I remember. A photograph from her ninety-second birthday is magnet-tacked up on the refrigerator. She and her inventor husband more or less raised my father for a brief, but memorable period in his childhood; stories from that time include lots of electronics, lots of books, and my father rolling a car. (Never let the eleven-year-old drive.) In photographs from the 1930's, they look like a couple of movie stars; my mother and my father both agree that she really, really couldn't cook. She got up to take a walk around her room and stopped. Her memory for a blessing.

[identity profile] ap-aelfwine.livejournal.com 2007-09-11 05:14 am (UTC)(link)
I'm very sorry for your loss.

[identity profile] setsuled.livejournal.com 2007-09-11 06:05 am (UTC)(link)
My father and I watched La Jetée (1962) this afternoon. I had been cautioned that it might not be as impressive as its reputation, but I found it incredibly haunting, one of the most beautiful things I have seen on a screen:

I've been wanting to see that since I heard 12 Monkeys was based on it.

things that are so tightly concentrated in themselves that they become both self and symbol

I like the sound of that.

must have been like having someone unscrew the top of your head and drop in a handful of slides. It was a good thing to see.

From what you describe, it definitely must have been. I've not seen nearly enough New Wave films . . .

My great-aunt, although she was never referred to as anything other than "Aunt Joy," died this morning.

I'm sorry.

[identity profile] shewhomust.livejournal.com 2007-09-11 08:46 am (UTC)(link)
That's a fine double whammy of a post; the two things in it sit together so rightly and complete each other so utterly that I see no room for further comment. So this is just me saying "Hi!"

[identity profile] alankria.livejournal.com 2007-09-11 10:01 am (UTC)(link)
That sounds like an incredible film. I'll definitely have to watch it sometime.

Have you seen a film called Seraphim Falls? It's out in the cinema in the UK at the moment. I think it's something you would enjoy.

I'm sorry to hear about your great-aunt's death.

[identity profile] cucumberseed.livejournal.com 2007-09-11 12:21 pm (UTC)(link)
Losing an older relative you don't know well is awkward; it's hard to feel a loss for someone you don't know, hard to not feel a loss for someone you never really got to know.

And so it goes.

That applies equally to the first part of the post, now that I think about it.

[identity profile] strange-selkie.livejournal.com 2007-09-11 12:47 pm (UTC)(link)
That's quite a song for such a post....

*hugs*

[identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com 2007-09-11 01:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Death is very strange; the more I'm exposed to it, the less I understand it. I'm glad Aunt Joy's memory is a blessing.

The film sounds very difficult! But sometimes difficult things are good to see.

[identity profile] time-shark.livejournal.com 2007-09-11 02:44 pm (UTC)(link)
I watched La Jetée in college and found it intriguing, though I wasn't overwhelmed. Have you seen 12 Monkeys?

Your aunt sounds like she was a fascinating person.

[identity profile] xterminal.livejournal.com 2007-09-12 02:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Condolences on Aunt Joy. I never know what to say about such things, and thus normally keep my mouth shut.

with the exception of a few precious, unexpected seconds

Wasn't that just amazing? I'd have been impressed with it nonetheless, but those twenty or so frames blew it into a whole other arena of brilliance, as far as I'm concerned. So minimal, and yet so expressive. (And shocking, after fifteen or so minutes of stills.)