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Wild Grass
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Where the Wild Things Grow
Right on the
edge of the film, there’s another system: an array of heterogeneous objects,
from flowers to sewing-machines. They’re mysterious, Surrealist, almost alive.
They need the brain to make sense of them. And that’s where we live. The links
which make life meaningful are the cracks between the facts.
–
Raymond Durgnat on Mon Oncle d’Amérique (1980)
It starts like a Brian De Palma movie, in a mode of
full exhilaration. Shots of feet take us to a chic shopping centre. A
voice-over informs us that a woman – Marguerite (Sabine Azéma), whose face will
not be fully seen from the front until six-and-a-half minutes into the film –
has special shoe requirements, and this specialness is what will kick off ‘the
incident’ (the title of Christian Gailly’s source novel) at the heart of the
narrative.
Point-of-view rules, but on a split register: both the
character’s sensorial experience of her surroundings, and the camera’s
insistent display of its own, peculiar way of seeing things. Sudden bursts of
slow-motion linger on the saleswoman who thrills Marguerite (it is her secret),
and eventually on the roller-blading thief who snatches her purse. Mark Snow’s
musical score soars. Within the shoe shop itself, we could almost be watching a
scene from the TV series Sex and the City (1998-2004): a rapid but luxuriant montage surveys shelves, brands, boxes.
Straight away, Alain Resnais’ masterful film announces
its proudly mixed-up character. He is a director who has always complicated
drama with comedy, realism with surrealism, philosophy with pop culture – and
vice versa. Invention and surprise are his watchwords: as the French critic François
Thomas once remarked, Resnais’ gambit as an artist is to outrage or confound
viewers at the start of a film, but hold them in their seats to the very end. Wild Grass is a relatively gentle work
when placed beside Hiroshima mon amour (1959) or Providence (1977), but it
still has the pundits guessing: what is this brazenly youthful film from a man
of 87 – deadly serious, or an extended joke? A summing-up of the œuvre, or a taking-off into unknown
skies? It manages, magisterially, to be all of these things at once.
The fact is that, although Resnais is undoubtedly an
auteur, he has never sought to guide his career in any overarching, thematic
way. Projects were posed to him by producers, he claims; people (writers,
actors, composers, designers) happened to be available to collaborate with him.
However, a certain adherence to automatic writing in the Surrealist sense –
giving himself over to whatever script was before him, following his intuitions
and impulses – has led Resnais, despite himself (which is exactly the way he
wants it), to construct a body of work of astounding coherence, a garden of
many paths that always go to the same emotions and concerns.
Thus, as in so many Resnais films, the inciting incident
of purse snatching in Wild Grass leads to a strange kind of seemingly-destined encounter: the luck (good or bad,
we must decide) of Georges (André Dussolier) in finding Marguerite’s discarded
accessory takes him quickly to a full-blown obsession, even to the point of
stalking her. Phone calls are made and messages left, letters are sent, cops
are called in to issue stern warnings to Georges. It’s not Fatal Attraction (1987) – although Resnais, dancing deftly between
genres, leads us to expect this for a while, especially given the dark,
never-clarified hints about Georges’ criminal past – but nor is it standard
French arthouse fare glorifying amour fou.
That’s because, at some, almost indiscernible point,
something twists in this plot, and Marguerite finds herself interested in,
maybe even smitten by Georges – while he begins to dart off on other tracks,
including a mind-boggling flirtation with Marguerite’s best friend, Josepha
(Emmanuelle Devos), in the front seat of her car.
Resnais juggle so many elements in this film. Flashes
of the associative editing he mastered long ago rub up against jolly, nostalgic
evocations of a pilot’s life – here, Resnais finds in the material at hand an
unexpected opportunity to pay homage to the wartime experiences of his old
friend, Chris Marker. A riot of artifice in the colour, lighting and décor
schemes – “I really like it when a film looks like a film”, he humbly declared
in a recent interview – is tempered by shrewd observation of a very real, social mise en scène, a comedy of manners
grounded in the everyday: look at all the marvellous scenes involving Mathieu
Amalric as a cop, with protocols of personal space and authority subtly
challenged, breached or reinforced at every step.
Even before the opening scene of Wild Grass, images under the credits show us tufts of grass that
have appeared between the cracks in a pavement; the film will return often to
this motif in many forms. Is this a signal of unconscious dreams, of the return
of the repressed? Yes and no. Because, thanks to Gailly’s novel, Resnais is
able to tune into something at once more fantastical and more mundane than the
familiar Freudian realm. Resnais credits his producer Jean-Louis Livi with the
fine formulation that Wild Grass is
less about raw desire than something far trickier and more quizzical: a desire to desire.
The film captures and enacts – deeply true, on this
level, to Gailly’s prose – that odd, inner voice within all the characters that
oscillates between conscious, unconscious and preconscious impulses: there is
desire, yes, but also the rationalisation, the talking-up of this desire, the
whimsical playing with one’s own desire (and its consequences) as a cat plays
with a mouse. And, as in Mon Oncle d’Amérique,
it is cinema itself which, as Resnais constantly underlines, both feeds the
fantasies and provides the often unliveable ego-ideals. It is all so glorious,
and all so frustrating.
Even though Wild
Grass is about nothing less than life, love and death, it is not a grandly
existential statement. Far from it. Exploring the merry maze of what Durgnat
called “the cracks between the facts”, Resnais fully finds here what he has
sought since at least Life is a Bed of
Roses in 1983: an unbearable lightness of being.
© Adrian Martin June 2010 |