Film
What's on at the cinema plus reviews of the latest movie and DVD releases
Robert Bresson films at the BFI
Ahead of a Robert Bresson season at the BFI, Wally Hammond asks whether the legendarily austere films of the great French director still exert an influence on the present generation of filmmakers
Who would you say is the film director who exerts most influence today? George Lucas, whose ‘Star Wars’ space operas kicked off – for better or worse – not only the modern movie franchise phenomena but inaugurated our ‘shock and awe’ era of pulversing industrial FX, computer technology, and visual overkill? How about one of the half-dozen or so ’70s movie mavericks – from Spielberg to Scorsese – who helped shake up and renew the moribund Hollywood, mostly from within. You could even make a case for John Hughes, say, who since ‘The Breakfast Club’ has shown how the judicious exploitation of juvenalia never hurt a film’s box-office prospects or, at a pinch, Chris Columbus, whose reading of the demographaphic runes revolutionised family entertainment. No? Not convinced? Okay, what would you say if I suggested… Robert Bresson?
Who? Robert Bresson. Born, probably, in 1901 in the Auvergne and, between 1943 and 1983, the maker of 13 films – 11 of which show in this month’s BFI Southbank retrospective (‘Une Femme Douce’ (1969) and ‘Four Nights of a Dreamer’ (1971) were sadly unavailable for rights reasons). This austere Jansenist Catholic’s style was unique: a search for the essential which, movie by movie, stripped itself of unwanted clutter, camera movements, cutaways, extraneous music, even professional acting. His films – including his prison escape movie ‘A Man Escaped’, his thief’s journal ‘Pickpocket’, his masterpiece on exclusion ‘Mouchette’ or his final anti-materialist ‘melodrama’ ‘L’Argent’ – arguably constitute the most integral and purely cinematic body of work of all the top ten all-time greats.
Ah! The greats. They’ve had a wave of publicity recently, following the deaths of Ingmar Bergman and Michelangelo Antonioni. One debate raging among the flurry of op-ed pieces in newspaper arts pages and the whirr of movie-buff web- and blog-sites was that over Chicago Reader writer Jonathan Rosenbaum’s Bergman obit, ‘Scenes from an Overrated Career’ where the influential critic was deemed to make disparaging remarks on the great Swede in favour of two other God-fearing canonical figures, the great Danish director Carl Dreyer and – our dear subject – Dreyer’s possible heir, Bresson. Whatever the justice of his particular view, Rosenbaum did posit an interesting test: ‘The best indication of an artist's continuing vitality is simply what of his work remains visible and is still talked about.’
Christ, I’d say Rosenbaum’s on a sticky wicket with the idea of visibility. Bergman, Antonioni or Bresson: they’re all equally unknown to – or at least unseen by – the man on the Clapham bendy-bus. Despite the impact of DVD, arthouse cinema is still a preserve of the cinephile few. And even the few can be fickle: from time to time, be it noted, revered figures can be disinterred from their tombstones in the mausoleum that is the film canon and shuffled out to the pauper’s plot. Bresson’s own votes slumped in the latest, 2002, Sight and Sound poll of filmmakers’ top films.
Thankfully, polls aren’t everything and, as history allows, influence isn’t the same thing as reputation. Influence can be, and is, insidious. You could say pronouncements of Bresson’s demise in 1999 have indeed proved premature. He lives. Whereas nobody, consciously or unconsciously, can or wants to make, films like Bergman or Antonioni these days, any number of filmmakers – as the directors from Nuri Bilge Ceylan to Paul Schrader in the BFI’s matching (11-film) season of Bresson-inspired films testifies – want to make films like Bresson. To quote J Hoberman – ‘starting with Jean-Luc Godard and Michelangelo Antonioni, there is scarcely a major European director to emerge since 1960 who does not in some way show his influence: Rivette, Marguerite Duras, Straub, Tarkovsky. Fassbinder, Chantal Akerman, Andrei Sokurov, Bela Tarr and Aki Kaurismaki are all in some way Bressonian.’
What applies in Europe, applies doubly outside. Hou Hsiao-hsien or Jim Jarmusch – incidentally, in voting for ‘Mouchette’, the only invited filmmaker in the S&S poll to plump for Bresson – are more than happy to acknowledge their debt and show it in their empathy, attention, patience, acceptance of silence and the revelatory nature of the supposedly mundane. Arguably, of even more importance for developing cinema – for directors such as Abderrahmane Sissako in Africa, Apichatpong Weerasethakul in Thailand or Cristi Puiu in Romania – is Bresson’s sublime economy, clarity and seriousness of purpose. It’s no mystery that he’s the patron saint of poor or strapped filmmakers worldwide.
The truth is, however, that Bresson’s influence goes deeper than the exemplary. He stands in relation to film much as Shakespeare does to literature. The words used to denote his developed style – minimalism, litotes, ellipsis (all words meaning leaving things out) – can not only be off-putting but misleading. As can descriptions of his aims: to explore the nature of redemption, to express spiritual transcendence or the workings of grace. Contrary to received opinion, his films are not empty but full of event, they are not obscure but set up the relationship with the viewer most directly. Neither are they austere, in the sense that they forbid beauty, incident or pleasure (sexual or otherwise).
Furthermore, his search for ‘purity’ of effect – whether on location with his poor ‘models’, gazing through the camera or engaged in the editing suite – helped define the language, the very syntax, of film itself. And, as such, you could argue, his language is used as much by the Dardenne Brothers and Chantal Akerman as it is by the likes of George Lucas or Chris Columbus. And you don’t get much more influential than that.
Finally, none of that would mean a thing were it not for the intimate knowledge of people – rather than of God – that Bresson displays and on which is based his unique ability to surprise. Bresson: ‘I don't think so much of what I do when I work, but I try to feel something, to see without explaining, to catch it as near as I can – that’s all . . . Thinking is a terrible enemy. You should try to work not with your intelligence, but with your senses and your heart. With your intuition.’ Why not let your intuition take you down to the BFI sometime this month. You could be in for a surprise.
The Bresson season is at BFI Southbank throughout Oct.
Author: Wally Hammond
Most popular on this site
Top Stories
Time Out's 101 Films of the Decade
Ten years, thousands of movies and millions of dollars in international box office, and it all boils down to this
Martin Provost discusses 'Séraphine'
Trevor Johnston talks to the director of 'Séraphine' about bringing a little known French painter back to life
Our verdict on Peter Jackson's The Lovely Bones
Peter Jackson ends a triumphant decade with a sentimental misfire with this lush Alice Sebold adaptation
On the set of Ken Loach's 'Route Irish'
Dave Calhoun meets Ken Loach on the set of his forthcoming Iraq war movie
Stephen Poliakoff discusses 'Glorious 39'
Stephen Poliakoff’s ‘Glorious 39’ is his first film for cinema since ‘Food of Love’ in 1997. Dave Calhoun met him
Is 'Paranormal Activity' the new 'Blair Witch'?
How does a film go from DIY experiment to box-office smash? 'Paranormal Activity' director Oren Peli explains
Steven Soderbergh on 'The Informant!' and 'The Girlfriend Experience'
We talk to Steven Soderbergh about his two forthcoming films: one featuring a porn star, the other a chubby Matt Damon
A gateway to all things 'New Moon'
In anticipation of 'The Twilight Saga: New Moon', Time Out is offering the chance to pick up a limited edition pack with three exclusive magazines and a free poster.
The films that deserve a TV spin-off
With Roland Emmerich suggesting he'd like to make a '2012' TV spin-off, we propose some more movie-to-TV serialisations
Time Out's 50 greatest animated films with commentary by Terry Gilliam
In celebration of the release of Pixar's 'Up' and Wes Anderson's 'Fantastic Mr Fox', read our rundown of fifty classic feature length animations










What do you think?
Post your comment now