Watching a Robert Bresson film is always such an elemental film
experience. He seems to wring out every bit of excess (exposition, dialogue, action
and reaction) from the proceedings that it feels like a very unique
film experience. There is nothing else like it. L’Argent was Bresson’s final film in a
career spanning only 13 features. Bresson may have been the director least reliant upon cinematic tropes of any kind. He avoids melodrama, sentiment, emotion, and action. He doesn't rely on acting, flamboyant cinematography, or swelling music. He distills cinema down to observance. Pure and simple observance. In some ways, L’Argent is a recap of his
career and a summation. In other ways though, it feels distinctly different
from anything else he made. Perhaps it’s the ending of the film here that
leaves a different taste in my mouth. It’s challenging stuff and Bresson at his
most penetrating.
L’argent details a sequence of events and those people tied to the
events. Two young boys pass along a counterfeit 500 franc bill at the local
photo and camera shop. The owner realizes it’s counterfeit and in order to get rid of it, passes it along
to a gas-man named Yvon. Yvon attempts to
pay with this money at a café where the waiter calls him out for attempting to use counterfeit bills (actually unknowingly) and calls the cops.
He is arrested but avoids jail time. Yvon loses his job though and thus begins a downward spiral for Yvon. As a way to
make money to provide for his wife and child, he takes a job as a getaway
driver for a heist. He is caught, arrested and thrown in jail. While in jail,
his child dies and his wife abandons him. When he is released, he turns to a
life of theft and murder.
Bresson is concerned with the evil in society and the fact that one
person’s petty actions can severely affect another’s life. The fact that callousness
and evil run roughshod throughout this film, without any sense of intervention
from God, or friends or anything resembling grace or forgiveness is
thoroughly Bresson and thoroughly part of his dogma. I always find his films to be filled with a sort of despair for society or despair for humanity. This is our
world. We are lost. Yet even the way Bresson wants to show the action is resigned and
reserved, as if Bresson, nor the viewer, can look upon the cruelty. There are a
few examples of scenes shot so perfectly here it humbles me. The first is when
Yvon grabs the waiter and pushes him down into the table, knocking plates
everywhere. We are only shown the grab of the shirt and a quick shove,
lingering on the shot of Yvon’s open palm. We hear the crash and then we see a
shot of the table knocked over and the plates on the ground. We don’t see a
shot of the waiter in the act of falling down and crashing into the table. It’s all about the
intent and the aftermath, not the middle part of the action itself. Another sequence has a woman carrying a coffee mug. She is confronted by her father whom we see raise his
hand to strike her face. The film cuts to a shot of her hand and the coffee mug. We
hear the slap and the coffee spill on her hand. Again, we see the intent and
the aftermath, but we cannot look upon the action. This sort of pattern plays
out in the film in many other scenes as well.
What makes this film perhaps a departure for Bresson, is the violent
lashing out of the Yvon character when after he gets out of jail, he becomes a
murderer. Many of Bresson’s films end with the death of a protagonist, but it
comes not at the expense of others per se. I’m thinking of Mouchette’s suicide
in Mouchette (1967) or the priest’s death at the end of Diary of a Country Priest (1951), or even the donkey's death in Au Hasard Balthazar (1966). Those are moments of resignation and sadness, but in them there is also transcendence
as those characters are no longer suffering. That's one of the great things about Bresson.....the way he finds the humanity in even the darkest or saddest moments. For Yvon, there is a different
approach though…. taking the axe to a woman and her family (among others) who has taken him into their home and
sheltered him. Is Bresson showing us the inevitable conclusion of a society
built upon one evil act after another. Is this the logical summation of the
chain of sin? Unless someone breaks this chain, is this where we end up? I
think that this is Bresson’s most challenging work. It is not altogether tidy
and it leaves a messy aftermath to deal with.
"He avoids melodrama, sentiment, emotion, and action. He doesn't rely on acting, flamboyant cinematography, or swelling music. He distills cinema down to observance. Pure and simple observance."
ReplyDeleteIndeed Jon! Succinctly put. L'ARGENT is one of Bresson's darkest films, suffused with despair, and as you note an undercurrent of humanity, typical for the director. I do love the film too, but for me nothing tops BALTHAZAR, COUNTRY PRIEST and MOUCHETTE, though this film, A MAN ESCAPED and PICKPOCKET push close. The deceit that bring to mind the central premise in MADAME DE and WINCHESTER 73 segues into a searing condemnation of society and the evil that maligns it. Yetagain Jon, you've penned a tremendous review.
Thanks Sam! Yep Balthazar, Country Priest, and Mouchette are indeed in another league.....there is something simply arresting about this one in its own way too for me. I do like the references to Madame De and Winchester 73....you're right about that.
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