Episode 4 is titled "From Sarah to Colin".
Thomas (Michel Lonsdale) & Sarah (Bernadette Lafont) |
Meanwhile the other acting troupe lead by Lili introduces a new member Renaud who seems rather more physically skilled than the others but whose presence causes arguments and dissension. One of the members embarks on an exercise to separate body and voice but Renaud ruins it.
Thomas’s group meanwhile has Sarah as an observer. The long exercise they participate in during this episode involves five of the members lying prone, eyes shut, with their arms crossing while the other male member gives them instructions seemingly about how to think about/through the play. (During some of the cutaway shots to Sarah impassively observing there is a hair in the gate.)
Did anyone ever sit down and discuss with Jacques Rivette his fascination for observing and filming the creation of modern theatre productions using classical texts as their departure point for physical, aural and verbal improvisations? If there are interviews with the great man on this subject I would love to be informed of them. It seems to me, beyond being something where the director is fascinated by the spectacle of rehearsing actors, Rivette may be trying to chronicle the process of (theatre) creation whereby otherwise ordinary people are impelled into situations of physical and mental duress to create an image, a moment, some ‘meaning’. In this episode while Sarah (Bernadette Lafont) observes rehearsals and preparations, when she mentions she doesn’t have a copy of the text, she’s told she doesn’t need it.
Once I posted that comment, serious cinephile Kiki Fung posted a note on my Facebook page thus: Jonathan Rosenbaum's Rivette site has a collection of interviews. Rivette did discuss his process and preferences at length. His obesession for theatre started in his very first film PARIS BELONGS TO US but it was in L'AMOUR FOU then OUT 1 that he took his experiments to extreme (and then things become much easier to digest in what was to follow: CELINE AND JULIE GO BOATING). The exploration on the correlation between theatre and cinema has become a recurring theme...in almost all of his films. A famous quote "“all films are about the theatre, there is no other subject….If you take a subject which deals with the theatre to any extent at all, you’re dealing with the truth of the cinema…because that is the subject of truth and lies”. I think he was fascinated by the magic of the creative process, the mysterious aspect of performing, of people working together, getting caught up in a collaborative work. http://www.jacques-rivette.com/
Bruce Hodsdon has also commented: Isn't Rivette anticipating something of the role of Showteller in long form tv drama? Instead an evolving script he takes up classic theatre texts and the writers' room becomes the actors' room?
Once I posted that comment, serious cinephile Kiki Fung posted a note on my Facebook page thus: Jonathan Rosenbaum's Rivette site has a collection of interviews. Rivette did discuss his process and preferences at length. His obesession for theatre started in his very first film PARIS BELONGS TO US but it was in L'AMOUR FOU then OUT 1 that he took his experiments to extreme (and then things become much easier to digest in what was to follow: CELINE AND JULIE GO BOATING). The exploration on the correlation between theatre and cinema has become a recurring theme...in almost all of his films. A famous quote "“all films are about the theatre, there is no other subject….If you take a subject which deals with the theatre to any extent at all, you’re dealing with the truth of the cinema…because that is the subject of truth and lies”. I think he was fascinated by the magic of the creative process, the mysterious aspect of performing, of people working together, getting caught up in a collaborative work. http://www.jacques-rivette.com/
Bruce Hodsdon has also commented: Isn't Rivette anticipating something of the role of Showteller in long form tv drama? Instead an evolving script he takes up classic theatre texts and the writers' room becomes the actors' room?
Marie (Hermine Karagheuz, middle) |
But I digress….
Meanwhile Frederique continues her perambulations around Paris and comes across a man (Jacques Doniol-Valcroze) playing chess by himself. She senses money. He senses sex and offers to teach her to play chess, one of the most sure-fire methods of seduction known to man. While he gets her a drink she rifles through his nearby desk after breaking a lock and purloins a set of letters.
Frederique (Juliet Berto) |
Thomas pays a visit to Emilie and her children but from the way he moves he has some sort of secret affair going with the children’s nanny Iris. Questions are asked about Emilie's husband Igor.
In a way which we’ve come to accept as the pace of things, the series is starting to burrow more deeply into the Treize, starting first to identify members though they do include characters we have yet to, or may never, see.
We’ve passed a slippery 1h46mins.
Onward.
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