更新时间:2020-10-10

灾难片影评:“Film Catastrophe”: The Making of a Godard Film that Anticipated a Real-Life Disaster


Brody, Richard. “‘Film Catastrophe’: The Making of a Godard Film That Anticipated a Real-Life Disaster.” The New Yorker

“Film Catastrophe,” which screens only once, on Saturday, in the “Art of the Real” series at Film Society of Lincoln Center, is the first feature by Paul Grivas, who is Jean-Luc Godard’s nephew. Grivas, who is a photographer, was Godard’s assistant on the movie “Film Socialisme,” from 2010, and “Film Catastrophe” is largely a making-of for Godard’s film. Much of “Film Socialisme” was shot aboard the cruise liner Costa Concordia, in the midst of one of its actual Mediterranean voyages. Godard and the cast and crew were integrated with the passengers, and “Film Socialisme” is both a historical inquiry, linking the circulation of money and ideas to longstanding political conflicts in the Mediterranean region, and a virtual documentary on the paying customers’ activities aboard the ship. Yet the Costa Concordia entered history on its own, in 2012, when it went aground, off the coast of Italy, resulting in the deaths of thirty-two passengers—and, true to modern habits, some passengers took their own videos of the disaster that they experienced.

In “Film Catastrophe,” Grivas briefly shows some of that horrific footage of the shipwreck in motion. He also suggests, with a loving wink, that an agent of mischief has already made an appearance aboard the ship, when a woman is sitting alone at a banquet table and a familiar figure strolls through the frame behind her—Godard himself, with a gray-white beard, a ski cap and a scarf, and a glass in hand. “Film Catastrophe” includes copious outtakes from “Film Socialisme” that show, with wondrous admiration, Godard at work with original methods that are simultaneously casual and meticulous, spontaneous and stringent—and that are inseparable from the artistic results onscreen. “Film Socialisme” was made with a small single-lens-reflex still-and-video camera that’s easily handheld but that, for the most part, is posed on a lightweight tripod. Godard doesn’t have a camera assistant use a slate to mark scenes and synch sound; rather, he stands in front of the camera himself, calls out the scene, and claps his hands in front of the lens. (Fascinatingly, there’s one time that a regular slate is used—for a scene involving Patti Smith and Lenny Kaye, as if, in their presence, he had to seem, and to be, a bit more traditionally professional.)

Godard’s setups are simple: closeups and two shots, composed with a spare yet profound graphic inflection, in which characters deliver epigrammatic dialogue of philosophical and literary inspiration. Godard’s attentiveness to his actors is gentle and precise; his verbal instructions are calm, and his physical miming of desired gestures is good-humored. What Grivas reveals is nothing less than the radical simplicity with which Godard creates moments of breathtaking grandeur. Grivas offers a wide range of shots from sequences that aren’t in the finished film—outtakes from “Film Socialisme” that attach to the film seamlessly. “Film Catastrophe” includes some amazing images and moments that extend the original film’s imaginative range, including one of an elevator in dark green light that looks like a digital updating of a German Expressionist film.

There’s an element of comedy that runs through “Film Catastrophe,” in Godard’s effort to film a single, simple scene between two characters, in which one actor repeatedly fluffs his lines. Godard ends up doing more than a dozen takes, never losing his cool, even as viewers watching the actor’s mess-ups may be ready to burst from his repressed frustration. There are also joshing nods to Godard’s impish presence, which are warmed by his and Grivas’s family bond. Despite the movie’s threads of humor (and an exaggeratedly sardonic rush to the ending), Grivas isn’t making fun of the ship’s tragedy; he’s making an observation, corresponding to the very subject of Godard’s film, that an exemplary object of modern capitalist spectacle also turns out to be the site and source of a deadly industrial disaster. In this way, too, the film is more than a mere supplement to “Film Socialisme”; it’s bound together with its DNA.


A note on the author:

Richard Brody began writing for The New Yorker in 1999. He writes about movies in his blog, The Front Row. He is the author of “Everything Is Cinema: The Working Life of Jean-Luc Godard.”

Brody, Richard. “‘Film Catastrophe’: The Making of a Godard Film That Anticipated a Real-Life Disaster.” The New Yorker, www.newyorker.com/culture/the-front-row/film-catastrophe-the-making-of-a-godard-film-that-anticipated-a-real-life-disaster. Accessed 10 Oct. 2020.


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