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La Chinoise

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1967 film by Jean-Luc Godard

La Chinoise
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJean-Luc Godard
Screenplay byJean-Luc Godard
Based onDemons
byFyodor Dostoyevsky
Starring
CinematographyRaoul Coutard
Edited by
Music by
Production
companies
  • Anouchka Films
  • Les Productions de la Guéville
  • Athos Films
  • Parc Films
  • Simar Films
Distributed byAthos Films
Release date
  • 30 August 1967 (1967-8-30) (France)
Running time
96 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench

La Chinoise, ou plutôt à la Chinoise: un film en train de se faire[1] (lit.'The Chinese, or, Rather, in the Chinese Manner: A Film in the Making'), commonly referred to simply asLa Chinoise, is a 1967 Frenchpoliticaldocufiction film written and directed byJean-Luc Godard about a group of youngMaoist activists in Paris.

La Chinoise is a loose adaptation ofFyodor Dostoyevsky's 1872 novelDemons (also known asThe Possessed). In the novel, five disaffected citizens, each representing a different ideological persuasion and personality type, conspire to overthrow the Russian imperial regime through a campaign of sustained revolutionary violence. The film, set in contemporary Paris and largely taking place in a small apartment, is structured as a series of personal and ideological dialogues dramatizing the interactions of five French university students—three young men and two young women—belonging to a radical Maoist group called the "Aden Arabie Cell" (named after the novelAden, Arabie byPaul Nizan). The film won theGrand Jury Prize in1967 Venice Film Festival.[2]

Plot

[edit]

The five members are Véronique (Anne Wiazemsky), Guillaume (Jean-Pierre Léaud), Yvonne (Juliet Berto), Henri (Michel Semeniako) and Kirilov (Lex de Bruijn). A black student named Omar (Omar Blondin Diop), "Comrade X", also makes a brief appearance. The two main characters, Véronique and Guillaume Meister (the latter named after the titular hero ofGoethe's famous 1795bildungsromanWilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship), discuss the issue of revolutionary violence and the necessity of political assassination to achieve revolutionary goals. As an advocate of terrorism as a means of bringing about the revolution, Véronique roughly corresponds to the character of Pyotr Stepanovich Verkhovensky inThe Possessed. Véronique and Guillaume are engaged in a personal relationship, with Véronique as the more committed, dominant partner.

Yvonne is a girl from the country who occasionally works as a prostitute for extra money to purchase consumer goods (much like Juliette Janson, the principal character in Godard's previous film,Two or Three Things I Know About Her). Yvonne does most of the housecleaning in the apartment and, together with Guillaume, she acts out satirical political skits protestingAmerican imperialism in general, and U.S. PresidentLyndon Johnson'sVietnam policy in particular.

Henri is eventually expelled from the group for his apparent backsliding Soviet revisionism, comically suggested by his defense of the 1954Nicholas Ray movieJohnny Guitar. In this sense he loosely corresponds to the character of Ivan Shatov inThe Possessed, a student who is marked for assassination because he has abandoned the tenets of leftist radicalism.

Kirilov is the only character in the film who actually takes his name from a character in Dostoyevsky's novel; inThe Possessed, Kirillov is a suicidal Russian engineer who has been driven to nihilism and insanity by the failure of his philosophical quest. True to his literary namesake, Godard's Kirilov also descends into madness and ultimately commits suicide.

When Guillaume complains that he cannot listen to music and work at the same time, Véronique uses a facetious declaration of "unlove" to teach him (and the audience) the Maoist lesson of "struggle on two fronts". Véronique then leaves the apartment alone and sets off for a mission to kill theMinister of Culture of the Soviet Union,Mikhail Sholokhov, during his official diplomatic visit to France.

On the train rideen route to the planned assassination, Véronique engages in a discussion with the political philosopher,Francis Jeanson (Jeanson was actually Anne Wiazemsky's philosophy professor at theParis X University Nanterre during 1966–67; a few years earlier, he had once been a communist and the head of anetwork which supported the Algerian national liberation movement. This led to his highly publicized arrest and trial by the French government in September 1960.)[3]

In the scene on the train, Jeanson argues against the use of violence as a means to shut down the French universities. However this does not dissuade Véronique (for her dialogue in this scene, Godard fed Anne Wiazemsky her lines through an earpiece).[3] The appearance of Francis Jeanson in the film seems to correspond to the character of Stepan Trofimovich Verkhovensky (Pyotr's father and Stavrogin's surrogate father) inThe Possessed. Indeed, much like Stepan Trofimovich, Jeanson is an intellectual and philosopher who serves as a kind of father-figure/mentor to Véronique.

Eventually the train arrives at its destination, and Véronique sets off to the hotel where the Soviet Minister of Culture is staying. She at first mistakenly reverses the digits of the room number and ends up killing the wrong man, then returns and carries out the assassination upon realizing her mistake. The return of the original owners of the apartment where the cell has been living causes them to leave. The revolutionary activities of the Aden Arabie cell prove unsuccessful, and the film ends with Véronique narrating that she plans to return to school, having realized that she has made only the "first timid step in a long march".

Cast

[edit]

Themes

[edit]

Thematically,La Chinoise concerns the 1960sNew Left political interest in such historical and ongoing events as the legacy ofLenin's October 1917Russian Revolution, the escalating U.S. military activities in the increasingly unstable region ofsoutheast Asia, and especially theCultural Revolution brought about by theRed Guards underMao Zedong in thePeople's Republic of China. The film also touches upon the rise ofanti-humanistpoststructuralism in French intellectual life by the mid-1960s, particularly the anti-empiricist ideas of the French Marxist,Louis Althusser.

Godard likewise portrays the role that certain objects and organizations—such as Mao'sLittle Red Book, theFrench Communist Party, and other small leftist factions—play in the developing ideology and activities of the Aden Arabie cell. These objects and organizations appear to become repurposed as entertainment products and fashion statements within a modern consumer-capitalist society—the very society which the student radicals hope to transform through their revolutionary project.

This paradox is illustrated in the various joke sunglasses that Guillaume wears (with the national flags of the USA, USSR, China, France and Britain each filling the frames) while reading Mao's Little Red Book, as well as thesight gag of having dozens of copies of the Little Red Book piled in mounds on the floor to literally create a defensiveparapet against the forces of capitalist imperialism, and a jaunty satirical pop song, "Mao-Mao" (sung by Claude Channes), heard on the soundtrack. Godard suggests that the students are, at the same moment, both serious committed revolutionaries intent on bringing about major social change and confused bourgeois youth flirting with the notion of radical politics as a fashionable and exciting distraction.

Reception

[edit]

La Chinoise is not one of Godard's most widely seen films, and until 2008 was unavailable on DVD in North America. However, a number of critics such asPauline Kael,Andrew Sarris andRenata Adler have hailed it as among his best.[4][5] Given that the film was made in March 1967—one year before violent student protest became a manifest social reality in France—La Chinoise is now regarded as an uncannily prescient and insightful examination of the New Left activism during those years.

Along withPierrot le fou,Masculin, féminin,Two or Three Things I Know About Her andWeek End,La Chinoise is often seen as signaling a decisive step towards Godard's eventual renunciation of "bourgeois" narrative filmmaking.[6] By 1968 he had switched to an overtly-political phase of revolutionary Maoist-collectivist didactic films withJean-Pierre Gorin and theDziga Vertov Group, which lasted for the next six years until 1973.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"La chinoise (1967)".MUBI. 11 August 2019.Archived from the original on 8 November 2019. Retrieved8 November 2019.
  2. ^"Venice Film Festival 1967".mubi.com.Archived from the original on 29 April 2021. Retrieved25 March 2021.
  3. ^abMacCabe, Colin (February 2005).Godard: A Portrait of the Artist at Seventy.Faber & Faber. p. 198.ISBN 0571211054.
  4. ^"A Minority Movie".The New Yorker. 30 March 1968.Archived from the original on 24 November 2022. Retrieved24 November 2022.
  5. ^"Andrew Sarris' Annual Top Ten Lists".IMDb. Retrieved24 November 2022.
  6. ^Ed Halter; Barney Rosset, eds. (2018).From the third eye: the Evergreen review film reader. New York: Seven Stories Press.ISBN 978-1-60980-615-6.OCLC 904144247.

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