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L'Argent (1983)
10/10
Treasures from a genius
18 February 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Robert Bresson is an intensely Catholic director whose sensibilities, unlike those of most of his French peers and colleagues, seem more aligned to the existential stillness of Ingmar Bergman or Carl Dreyer, a tradition imbued with the spirit of the still life. His is a world where the density, or intensity, of surface is scoured to reveal what would be 'otherwise', where this otherwise is not reducible or defined by psychology or any of the other narcissistic sins of our late modem world.

So, in the world of L'Argent, the world is fallen, always fallen, and redemption is never available in or from it. Grace, a divine gift (and Bresson's vision of grace explicitly obeys a radical economy of the gift) is arbitrary and unknowable, constituting an outside that can never be deduced from the events or causes of a particular narrative.

This is, perhaps obviously, the major difficulty audiences have in approaching Bresson's work. We are, for better or worse, conditioned by what we think narrative cinema is, and when we meet a story that disregards this, that even quite actively refuses us the pleasures of reason, our attempt to escape via the secular inevitably fails. We always walk out asking "why?" or even "I don't get it", not recognizing that the cause for what has happened is not within the characters, and certainly not of the quotidian, nor even of what we might ordinarily define as 'reason' to be.

On the other hand, this is plainly not an escape into the irrational, surreal, or some 'soft' eschatology of the deserving. Sacred cause and action is outside of reason, this is one of its sacred aspects, and will always remain mysterious. In Bresson's world we are fallen too.

This lack of reason is also evident in more simple ways in the film, through what might be described as the film's unreasonableness. In its manner of address the film performs, in relation to us, the same distance and immutability that is represented in the film's narrative. It offers little by way of narrative pleasure - for example we cannot identify with the characters through their acting as it is deliberately evacuated of expression and individuality - while the film's minimalist style replays the film's critique of the vanity of what might be termed 'style'. (Notwithstanding that a refusal of style can always be recovered as a style.) We are not to be accomplices in the story, nor are we its equals. Indeed, I suspect it could be that we are not even allowed or permitted the possibility of judgment in any ordinary sense (is it 'good' acting, why does Yvon kill, why does his daughter die, why does he confess?), for each of these locates us in a relation of intelligibility to the film.

In other words the film performs the same asymmetric relation between itself and us as is represented within the film between Yvon and the world. This is the textual model of prayer and while we certainly don't need to be Catholic to understand this it is probably important to recognize that this is the disposition of these works. On the other hand, there is something cinematic that Bresson has discovered, and L'Argent is perhaps one of the simplest expressions of this.

The practice of religious art has always privileged what can be characterized as poses, representations that carry the force of being 'distilled' moments - the crucifixion, Madonna and child, and St Anthony's agony for example. These instants, as distillations, fall outside any simple temporality, so they are a bit like posed photographs, though we understand that unlike the photograph, they are unposed - sacred snaps (we don't ordinarily think that Christ struck a pose while being crucified). Cinema as a modern technology is composed of many simultaneous images, most of which are moments that don't of themselves carry the import or distillation of the pose. What Bresson does is to take these two possibilities and combine them, so that within the indifference of the everyday he 'makes' poses. These are Bresson's hands, doors, feet, the rarefied backgrounds and even the soundtracks. Within these a 'major' pose will always emerge; Yvon's weeping, confession, the woman awaiting her death, Yvon's attack' on the guard, but these poses while derived from the quotidian, point past the quietude of what is already in the world.

These poses - just think of the hands in L'Argent - represent spaces that have become singular. They are separated out from their surrounding space, so the image's relation to other images, what can come next, is now freed from the 'rules' of continuity editing, it can be any space (any location, any event). In addition, once what produces the image of the hands is no longer the flow of movement defined by a before and after, an intensity is produced in the image, a quality that is, precisely: the pose.

For Bresson this achievement is religious in intent, a revealing of the sacred within the profane. For L'Argent the question and mystery of the sacred is not merely limited by the unknowability of grace, but applies equally to the intelligibility of evil: what does it mean to choose evil when indeed there is choice?
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10/10
Bresson continues to impress
6 January 2006
Warning: Spoilers
At the very heart of Lancelot du Lac (1974), Robert Bresson places a single, resonant shot: Lancelot (Luc Simon) comes through a door and approaches a crucifix in the foreground of the shot, slightly out of focus. "Lord, do not forsake us. Do not forsake me", he says, confiding, "I struggle against a death worse than death. Deliver me from a temptation I can hardly resist." God does not respond; Bresson does. A true cinematographic master, Bresson would never have left the crucifix out of focus by accident; it remains so only with distinct purposefulness. In their relentless crusade for the Holy Grail, the Knights of the Round Table abandoned the teachings of the Lord they claimed to serve. Lancelot's true focus is not on the cross, but on himself.

In the film's prologue, the knights are shown killing and pillaging unrepentantly. The sequence is highly stylised to emphasize the brazen immorality of their actions. Perhaps the quest began as a noble one but, in Bresson's view, the actual outcome was anything but. Yet the knights remain wholly unaware of the nature of their plight. They question whether God has forsaken them; never do they realize it was they who first forsook God. The will of the Round Table grew too strong, its knights too forceful. As the soothsayer at the film's opening predicts, "He whose footfalls precede him will die within a year." Artus (Vladimir Antolek), Lancelot and their compatriots attained more power than even they could wield, their legend and renown overshadowing their mere being. Indeed, Bresson considers their actions an affront to God himself. The knights became too dominant to abide humble, Christian lives, instead they transmuted the nature of the religion to meet their own purposes. As Guinevère (Laura Duke Condominas) reprimands Lancelot, "It was not the Grail, it was God you all wanted. God is no trophy to bring home."

Bresson instills this notion of transmutation in the core of the film. Particular attention should be paid to the picture's climactic battle scene. Being a Bresson film, this is of course a misnomer: the scene is neither climactic nor focused on battle. The inherent intrigue provided by such scenes bores Bresson, who instead focuses on a separate meaning. Archers fire arrows; not one is shown hitting anyone. Consider what Bresson does show the arrows piercing: trees. The film returns to this sight on multiple occasions, using repetition to emphasize the images' meaning. Yet depicting arrows piercing tree bark is far more than commentary on man's destruction of the environment. Consider that these arrows are crafted from the wood of these very trees. As Bresson sees it, man has transmuted the trees' nature – from bearers of life to harbingers of death – to suit his own self-interest. Apply a similar notion to the knights' treatment of Christianity and Bresson's vision begins to come into focus.

Yet the film's ideas about transmutation of the innate extend beyond the mere implementation of Christian thought, down to the nature of man himself. Consider Bresson's fascination with the knights' armour, highlighted by its strangely overt presence on the soundtrack. Armour is used to shield, but not solely to ward off physical harm. The knights wear their armour in a subconscious effort to separate themselves from the frailty of corporeal existence. Arrogance has led them to believe their import has grown beyond that of the common man; continually wearing armour functions to further suggest this perceived disparity.

Finding clear distinction between themselves and the everyday peasant, the knights tire of their daily routine. It seems they are aroused only by the chance to satiate their common appetite for competition. The scene immediately prior to the deadly, final battle is perhaps even more important than the climax itself. Informed that Mordred (Patrick Bernard) has taken the castle, Lancelot, Artus and the surviving knights mount their horses to meet their adversary in battle. The air bristles with excitement, evidenced by Bresson's uncharacteristically quick cutting. One by one, each knight closes the visor on his helmet. This ritualistic preparation is not shown to titillate the viewer. As the knights close their visors, the viewer loses sight of their faces, hallmarks of their individuality. This represents the last time Bresson shows any human countenances in the film. As a group, the remaining knights ride off to certain death, quelling individual qualms each likely has about the relevance of their actions. Of all Lancelot du Lac's transmutations, perhaps Bresson finds this most resonant: man's strange compulsion to subjugate his most ingrained of natures, his instinct for survival, to quench an unearthy thirst for destruction.
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