Date: Fri, 17 Dec 2004 18:48:29 -0800 (PST) To: deleuze-guattari-driftline.org-AT-lists.driftline.org Subject: [D-G] Notre Musique NOTRE MUSIQUE "Go toward the light and shine it on our night" [1] Philip Kennicott writes that "Jean-Luc Godard's _Notre Musique_, a film about war and reconciliation, is deeply Christian, a study in humility and the moral uncertainty at the core of the Christian message... it leaves the American style of religious and moral certainty looking as hollow and bombed out as the buildings that dot Godard's cityscapes of war... Does Christian empathy demand that the world cough up losers" for its entertainment and salvation? [2] Do Hawthorne berry extracts help the heart when ever writing from the "high and gloomy chamber of the old edifice"? "Olga can't respond to the spirit of hope symbolized by the bridge... On the other hand, Judith takes pictures ... past and future are one; she isn't afraid to dream... The director looks at Olga's sad, beautiful face reflected on the shiny surface of the disk... Inside were only books"! [3] And she, impossibly innocent - yet somehow able to interact? - never dreamed she might arouse such passion? "No, no, Giovanni ... I dreamed only to love thee, and be with thee a little time, and so to let thee pass away". Can science preserve them? Paranoid Marines shoot anything that moves, stamp wrists in ultraviolate for admittance to Saint Peter's rave: "might there not still be a hope of his returning within the normal limits of ordinary nature"? Unlikely! "Oh, weak and selfish and unworthy spirit, that could dream of an earthly union and earthly happiness as possible, after such deep love had been so bitterly wronged"! Oh, seeker of Paradise, "was there not, from the first, more poison in thy nature than in mine?" Death is the synthesis of heaven and hell, but love eludes them: "faint with the common air", wafting "within the influence of an unintelligible power ... Odors, being a sort of element combined of the sensual and the spiritual, are apt to deceive us in this manner... a wild offspring of both love and horror that had each parent in it, and burned like one and shivered like the other".. [4] Shot and reverse shot, imaginary: certainty, reality: uncertainty, darkness and light, stop and go.. I want to say, 'too oppositional', but there is a third something left unsaid, not because there is no answer, more because it is too fleeting to be said: the sense of surreality that lasts only briefly after the movie is over. So, it's never just "the Text and the Image".. Later, amazed to find that Godard himself says something similar: [5] "One concept I share with Anne-Marie Mieville is making triptychs: a past, a present, a future; one image, another image and what comes between, what I call the real image, the third person, as in the Trinity. And I would call the third person the image, the image we don't see, that comes from what we’ve glimpsed of what we will be seeing". [6] Even more fascinating, in a slant way, is the film preview of Henry Darger's animated _In the Realms of the Unreal_, directed by Jessica Yu and produced by Susan West. Yu's "Director's Notes" emphasizes her first impression of the "total lack of irony" in Darger's "combination of perverse subject matter and innocent presentation". Lytle Shaw describes how Darger's 15000 page horror story "begins with a climatic description of the edenic period" when, as Henry wrote, "There were never cold winters nor terrific windstorms nor anything to make people afraid". But, Shaw continues, "such serenity serves only as a foil for the wild disruptions to follow. And it is precisely a storm that signals the end of this golden age. As in the Bible, then, part of the fall is a fall into weather, into atmosphere as mutable, and motivated by forces beyond one's control". Referential integrity: --------------------- [1] Philip Kennicott, "In _Notre Musique_, Going to Hell and Back": http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A53802-2004Dec9.html [2] _Notre Musique_ 'official site': http://www.wellspring.com/movies/movie.html?movie_id=59 [3] Nathaniel Hawthorne, "Rappaccini's Daughter": http://www.shsu.edu/~eng_wpf/authors/Hawthorne/Rappaccini.htm -- see also the fine student essay by Laura Stallman, "Survey of Criticism of 'Rappaccini's Daughter' by Nathaniel Hawthorne": http://www.vcu.edu/engweb/eng372/rappcrit.htm mashed with [4] _Notre Musique_ (79 minutes, at Landmark's E Street Cinema) is not rated but contains images of wartime atrocities. There were a total of 6 viewers at a December 13 matinee (had to run out and 'pass water' during the Mostar Bridge scenes ;( [5] Jean-Luc Goddard, _Le Monde_ "Jew of the cinema" interview by Jacques Mandelbaum and Thomas Sotinel: http://www.wellspring.com/movies/text.html?page=interviews&movie_id=59 [6] See Sara Ayers Henry Darger page, http://www.saraayers.com/darger.htm for a glimpse of some of the art. See http://www.realmsoftheunreal.com/About/about.notes.html for Jessica Yu's Director's Notes. See http://cabinetmagazine.org/issues/3/henrydarger.php for Lytle Shaw's "The Moral Storm: Henry Darger's Book of Weather Reports". http://acer-access.com/~darger-AT-acer-access.com/links.htm has links to all of the above and more.. Excesses: -------- [1] "There isn't so much a single philosophical view of the world in all of this as a philosophical attitude grounded on intellectual doubt, moral caution and a deep philosophical craving to see things torn asunder somehow brought back together. Grammar divides us off from the world, cleaving it into I and everything else; history is a parade of divisions and destruction; even film, Godard argues, uses basic techniques that divide up a scene into opposing images and vantage points, negating the unity of the event it tries to capture". (Philip Kennicott) [2] "Cinema is made with what is called negatives in every language. And you draw a positive from this. And this specific element of photography is a metaphor which is more than a metaphor, it’s a kind of reality. With digital, there’s no more negative; you’ve only got the positive. You’ve only got the axis of good and not the axis of bad. - Jean-Luc Godard, Cannes Press Conference http://www.wellspring.com/movies/text.html?movie_id=59&page=synopsis&sidebar=393 [3] Giovanni begins in Purgatory - proud, envious, irascible, etc, and skips on up to Heaven, slothfully unawares: and, finally, shamed and reproached by Beatrice, left burning in Hell: "There is something truer and more real, than what we can see with the eyes, and touch with the finger... But now ... he fell down, grovelling among earthly doubts and ... resolved to institute some decisive test that should satisfy him, once for all". OH! such "shallowness of feeling and insincerity of character... 'at least', thought he, 'her poison has not yet insinuated itself into my system. I am no flower to perish in her grasp'!" (Nathaniel Hawthorne) [4] That's precisely what came thru most clearly in _Notre Musique_: the image not shown; the text spoken (or shown in subtitles ;) but not recalled; the music, of which I have absolutely no recall. Godard in his garden, dragging an old-fashioned phone out amongst the blossoms (no slave to the digital !) [5] "I wanted to show them [the NOTRE MUSIQUE characters] all on equal terms, I wanted to be democratic, with both fiction and documentary, real actors and false actors and no actors at all, and me intervening as a guest". (Jean-Luc Godard) [6] Lytle Shaw concludes: "And it is in this way that Darger's pathological overtones, his obsessions, begin to place him in the elevated company of those painters who failed Western religious painting by allowing the need for palpable particularity, visualization, and atmosphere to overcome and obliterate the appropriate generality more frequently needed for the goals of moralizing narrative". -------- My Music? -------- "Who'll save a poor orphan child, Henry Darger, lost, growing savage and wild? Henry". - Natalie Merchant, "Henry Darger", _Motherland_, Sep.2001 "... at once the faithful narrator of an infinitely segmented and complex Christian allegory, and a secret god, bursting through the surface of narration periodically to assert his absolute will" (Lytle). _______________________________________________ List address: deleuze-guattari-AT-driftline.org Admin interface: http://lists.driftline.org/listinfo.cgi/deleuze-guattari-driftline.org
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