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41 out of 49 people found the following review useful:
Agnès Varda's first film may be her greatest, 13 September 2002
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Author:
zetes from Saint Paul, MN
This film, Varda's directorial debut, is as impressive and accomplished as
any of the other New Wavers' debuts. It's definitely on the same level as
Jean-Luc Godard's Breathless, Francois Truffaut's The 400 Blows, or Alain
Resnais's Hiroshima, Mon Amour (Resnais actually worked as the editor for
this film). I actually think I prefer it to all three of those (as well as
the other three films of Varda's that I've seen). Historically, it's one
of
the most fascinating films I've ever witnessed. It, in one of its two
sections, sprouts from a mixture of both French Poetic Realism of the
1930s
and Italian Neorealism in the 1940s. It contains the social drama of such
Neorealism classics as Visconti's La Terra Trema, as this plotline deals
with a group of poor fishermen and their families. However, Varda doesn't
play this hand melodramatically at all. Even when a character dies, we
only
witness his mourning in a precisely documentarian way. We aren't asked to
feel any real emotion for him, which, for some reason, makes it all the
more
profound. In this way, the film resembles the French poetic realism
classics. L'Atalante is clearly echoed, as stray cats occupy many empty
spaces in the composition; they appear in nearly every scene in some
capacity. Also, the village festival that takes up most of its tail end
resembles very much the folksy rural wedding at the beginning of
L'Atalante.
The film also contains the good humor of Vigo's masterpiece. The second
half
of the film alternates with the first, switching over exactly every ten
minutes, a technique which Varda kind of pilfered from William Faulkner's
Wild Palms (aka If I Forget Thee, Jerusalem), a novel which Godard brings
up
in two of his films, Breathless and Two or Three Things I Know About Her.
This second half points toward the future. The French New Wave, just
getting
underway in 1956 (although the program notes that I received insisted that
it was made in 1954), comes to full bloom here. This half, which deals
with
a husband and wife who have started to grow tired of each other, consists
of
beautifully choreographed and composed shots of the two lovers strolling
along the beaches of the fishing town. The style here is instantly
recognizable as one which Resnais would adopt in Hiroshima Mon Amour and
Last Year at Marienbad, and even has that semi-resigned feeling to it, as
if, in a way, it's half-joking. What's really shocking is that this
section
does not just predict some of the techniques of the French New Wave, but
also the style of Ingmar Bergman's films. I would doubt that Bergman was
influenced at all by this film, as it's doubtful he ever saw it. Besides,
he
was well on his way to hitting his peaks by 1954, as we can see from such
early masterpieces as Sawdust and Tinsel. But there are some shots in this
film that, once again, will instantly call to mind nearly identical ones
from films such as The Seventh Seal and, even more so, Persona.
While it's a lot of fun to identify these old and new (and future) trends
in
La Pointe Courte, the film more than stands up on its own. Besides,
according to the program notes, Agnès Varda was no great cinephile, unlike
the other French New Wavers. The two storylines, and their differing
styles,
complement each other perfectly. It helps that Varda's direction is
impeccable. Before she came to the cinema, she was a photojournalist, and
it's extremely obvious. Her composition is absolutely stunning, with a lot
of concentration on surface textures. The film opens with a tight close-up
of a handcrafted wooden chair. You can't tell what it is initially, but as
the camera follows the grooves and backs up, the object is revealed for
what
it is. When one character goes to the train station to pick up his wife,
the
shot is absolutely award-worthy with its multiple diagonals in the train
tracks and the power lines in the distance. The use of sound in the film
is
also amazing. It's interesting when sound effects are included and when
they're occluded. When the married couple walks through a field, there are
carts squeaking down rusty tracks (it's a very odd event, but quite
remarkable to see and hear). But later, when a large train passes by them
only a dozen feet away, we don't hear it at all. Godard would play with
sound more thoroughly, but never as subtly.
It's a rather great tragedy that La Pointe Courte has gone almost entirely
unavailable. It barely got a release when it was first made, and, even
after
Varda gained prominence in the French cinema, it seems to have effectively
dropped off the face of the planet. I hope that someday there will be a
full
retrospective of her work on DVD. This film deserves to impress others as
much as it impressed me. 10/10.
4 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
There is no new wave, there is only the ocean (Chabrol)., 14 August 2010
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Author:
dbdumonteil
Agnès Varda's career began by the seaside in a small fisher port near
Sète and temporarily ended in 2009 with "Les Plages D'Agnès" (Agnès'
Beaches). Her debut was a commercial fiasco, only one theater in Paris
showed it when it was released (Jean Louis Chéret, Studio-Parnasse).
The part of the man was first intended for George Wilson but he became
ill and Philippe Noiret replaced him. This actor didn't like his
performance, he thought he was too young (26) and the choice of Wilson
was relevant (34). He said he was absent and the character eluded him.
The critics thrashed him.
Hailed as the first movie of the Nouvelle Vague, the movie owes at
least as much to Italian Neo-realism (Rossellini's "Viaggio In Italia"
which depicted a couple's trip whose marriage was on the rocks and
Visconti's "La Terra Trema" which dealt with the plight of the
fishermen in a small village).
What is definitely "Nouvelle Vague" is the shoestring budget (four
times less than "Breathless") and the literary, intellectual,
"overwritten" dialogs which seem today almost unbearable; this
bourgeois couple complaining about their heartaches, contemplating
their navels, walks through the crowd as if the inhabitants of the
village didn't exist. They don't relate to them: the only move the man
makes is to give an ice-cream to a child. That's not much for someone
who spent his whole childhood in the place. Filming on location wasn't
the Nouvelle Vague's invention as too many naive people still believe
today; for the record "l'Hirondelle Et La Mésange" was filmed entirely
on location in...1928.
The depiction of the village wanders drastically from the precepts of
the Nouvelle Vague busy being born but recalls the two Italian works
mentioned above. We feel that Varda cares for them even if her two
principals don't. She cares for their problems with the food hygiene
people or with the coastguards'. She feels for Raphaël the young man to
be jailed for five days as the gendarmes do for him. We learn he is an
Inscrit Maritime (that was the name of the conscripts who lived on the
seaside) and he is to do his military service: even if Varda doesn't
mention it, we do know he'll have to fight in a dirty war (the Algeria
war), like Antoine in "Cleo De 5 à 7".
I don't think like the precedent user that Varda's debut was her best.
Actually "Cléo..." is much better. There are similarities between the
two works: both Cléo and the couple move in a world they can't relate
to. But the key to the 1961 effort is the fact that Cléo opens up and
thanks to a soldier soon returning to fight becomes aware that people
exist outside her petty world. When she takes her glasses off, what a
symbol! But for the man and the woman of "La Pointe Courte" (The Short
Headland) -they are only referred through this, bearing no names- they
will stay with their inflated egos, their selfishness.
"They are always talking, they mustn't be happy" says a fisher's wife.
The short headland was a blind alley.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
See It For The Visuals, 27 November 2011
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Author:
film_ophile from boston mass. usa
I am not a film historian or a fan of Nouvelle Vague. I wanted to see
this film because it gave me the opportunity to see my hero, Philippe
Noiret, when he was just 26. Thankfully we began by watching the
interview w/ Varda, which really gives you a solid understanding of why
this film was/is so important, mostly having to do with it being so
innovative for its time, and its place as an influence on filmmakers
that followed. The 2 story lines did not engage or interest me
really.But the visuals were often terrific. And oddly enough, we had
just the night before, watched Clash by Night, an American film of the
same time which was shot on location in the fishing community of
Monterey CA. While visuals were often excellent there as well,in Clash
by Night the film really was the STORY, and a very passionate one at
that.
La Pointe-Courte was also really important as an example of one of the
few important "First Films' of a director,especially a woman director
in 1955 , and really especially, one who had no previous experience in
film making and no knowledge of film history.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Not very deep, 1 July 2011
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Author:
valadas from Portugal
Agnès Varda began her career in 1954 as a feature film director with this movie that tells two separate stories in reciprocal counterpoint: daily life at a fishing village near Sète in France with its joys and dramatic moments and the relationship between husband and wife when she who is a Parisian returns to him after he had chosen to return to his birthplace where he feels now very happy but that doesn't seem to please her very much at first and puts their marriage in danger. This situation is given in a series of soft dialogues between them which don't reveal themselves deep and meaningful enough to make us feel the sentiments behind them. Varda has done much better later with such very good movies like "Le Bonheur" or "Cléo de 5 à 7". However this movie is also classified as a landmark in the New Wave of French cinema that began about that time with names like Truffaut, Godard and Chabrol. It's this historical value that mainly makes this movie worth to be seen.
Simply Beautiful, 30 May 2012
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Author:
TheFiendsThatPlagueThee from United States
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Agnes Varda's first film is the story of life in a small fishing
village-relationships, sickness, death, day to day life, told from a
couple of different perspectives.
This is the fourth of Agnes Varda's films that I have seen, and though
it is not my favorite, it still has the beauty and stunning visuals of
her others. Both the mundane and the dramatic events of life are
brought to life through the wonderful cinematography, and Varda manages
to pull the viewer in to the film to empathize and sympathize with the
characters.
The scenes of the relationship between the couple are wonderful. Dance.
Poetry. Perfectly framed, perfectly paced and perfectly scripted, the
interplay between the couple is fascinating.
Simply beautiful.
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