Éloge De L’amour
(In Praise Of Love)
2001
In In Praise of Love, Godard focuses on a single topic for discussion – that of preservation of history. He debates the validity of preserving history using media and the replacement of memory by technology. Additionally, he raises questions about Hollywood’s methods of representing history and argues that the industry manipulates history in order to make the audience sympathize or react but never to indict the guilty. There are also some hard-hitting statements made about the history of the United States that are readily controversial. And these questions in turn bring up the conflicts between image and reality, documentation and re-creation of history and proprietorship and openness of history.
The film is marked by extraordinary cinematography with the first half of the film taking up a neo-realistic character. Godard achieves complete distancing and passivity of vision that the Italian pioneers could never achieve. The second half of the film literally changes tone with its excessively saturated Wong Kar Wai-ish colour palette and expressionistic style. In some ways, In Praise of Love is Godard’s version of Wings of Desire (1987). He films the past in colour and the present in monochrome as if suggesting that the variegated experiences and stories of the past have now lost their colours and been demarcated by black and white regions – like what a child sees. This absence of an adult’s vision that plagued the very nature of revolution seems to have made history a matter of pop culture.
This creation of extraordinary out of the ordinary, refusal of cinema to act as a social mirror and one-dimensionality of perception about history, Godard suggests, is decidedly a result of the years of training of the audience’s minds by the films of the west. There is a fantastic sequence where we see a theatre that is screening both Bresson’s Pickpocket (1959) and the Wachowski siblings’ The Matrix (1999). Though both the films deal with the notions of fate, free will and existential imprisonment, the popular choice seems be the spiced up version.
December 30, 2008 at 9:50 pm
I’d watched this movie at a film festival sometime back, and honestly speaking, I didn’t enjoy the movie at all. I remember I’d tried ‘watching’ it for the first few minutes, and lost interest after that. I found the movie too artsy and verbose, and the message too loud.
Later I’d read a couple of glowingly positive reviews of the movie, and that quite surprised me. That was the reason I’d expressed my interest in knowing your views. I see you too are quite positive about it. There are movies which one fails to understand what others saw in it which I failed to see or perhaps feel. I guess its one of those movies after all.
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December 31, 2008 at 8:05 am
I probably wouldn’t have liked the movie too if I hadn’t watched it after 40 odd Godard films. I guess this one like many Godard films is an acquired taste – a very difficult one at that.
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January 1, 2009 at 12:37 pm
This was the first Godard movie I saw and I feel in love with his works and cinema in general. Perhaps, it would be hard to describe what I saw in the film that had such a profound impact on me. Interestingly, I had never seen a foreign film before this one but had read plenty on them.
Perhaps, I don’t have the words to describe my experience, but surely would do someday in a work of fiction (movie).
Else, I continue to love this film: the use of colors, music, composition/editing style-in short everything. This is one Godard film I have continued to love and enjoy more with each viewing. It may not be dense as his other works, but like we all know, first love is always hard to forget and the measure of love is to love with measure, so yes, I love this film and continuing visiting moments of it from time to time.
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January 1, 2009 at 1:07 pm
Interesting that this was your first Godard and loved the film…
Thankfully Mine was the readily likeable Band of Outsiders!!!
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