PAGR TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1967 PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 1967 FILMS 'La Guerre est Finie:' Masterpiece By ANDREW LUGG When Allain Resnais made "L'Annee Derniere a Marienbad" he started a considerable contro- versy. The same is likely to hap- pen -with his latest film, "La Guerre est Finie." This.time, however, the confron- tation will -not be about the film itself, its narrative form, its "aes- thetics," but will be outside the film, in the realm of politics. Diego (Yves Montand) an exiled Spanish revolutionary, travels back and forth between France and Spain, delivering propaganda arid organizing the overthrow of the Franco regime. This is 1965 and for Diego it is the 25th year of the struggle. No Idealism He has no youthful idealism (so magnificently emphasized late in the film when Diego points out to some young revolutionaries the nature of the struggle-organ- ization). How for Diego it is a mater of the form of the action. He knows that "Spain is always stirring but nothing changes." It is either a tourist dream or a civil war dream. Nothing is romantic; neither the continual meetings in the suburbs, nor the organization. Diego is middle-aged, hardened, irratible. Juan has gone to Spain and is likely to be caught. So Diego must leave Paris, once again, to inform Juan and carry on the prepara- tions for the general strike and May Day. But the police are on to Diego too. Marianne (Ingrid Thulin), Diego's mistress must leave for Madrid to warn him. Finally, she also gets caught up in the movement. There is noth- ing else for her to do. Action, per- sistence, struggle, must become her norms also. The movement en- 'compasses and involves. Resnais spells out this involve- ment as the only mode of exist- ance. But there is no reason, nor victory for involvement. The planned General Strike is likely to be another defeat. It must be attempted, simply because the participants feel that it must. No amount of theory will prove or disprove this. As Kenneth Patchen put it "Lenin is terribly silent, terribly silent and dead." Half way through the film Marianne tells Diego of the book she and some friends are putting together. "The photographs for the book," she says, "are on how cities speak to individuals and how the citizens speak back and how a language develops." For Diego, the professional revolutionary, such a dialogue is almost impossi- ble. At best it is only an abstrac- tion. Resnais and Jorge Semprun, who wrote the script, know that the dialogue must be established. This revolution demands com- PASSIONATELY CONCEIVED: Tragic Hero of X4OO Blows' Victim o a e Society' mitment, but the promise of the realisation of the revolution can- not be a carrot to entice commit- ment. Invitation When Satre wrote "you have be- come free, join the Communist Party," Matthieu rejected the in- vitation. Resnais shows the ac- ceptance, with all its ambivalences. He shows Diego influenced by the minor incidents, victories and defeats. So, Diego loves Nadine (Genevieve Bujold) for her youth- ful enthusiasm and ability to act without doubt, and Marianne" for her maturity which he will not submit to the revolution. What he says to her aren't lies, they are barriers to her involve- ment. He knows that "things will not change by crying," but he is also aware that things must change. These are the uncertainties that are the tone or quality of Diego's life. They are equally the tone of the film. Resnais, masterfully, has cre- ated a film of great beauty which lays bare the nature of the strug- gle and of Diego's response. "La Guerre" is pure cinematic writing. One can only talk of this film as cinema, just as one uses the word "literature" to praise some great novel. Resnais' control, his cutting, the movement, the mise- -en-scenes are superb. See, for example, the scene of Nadine and Diego making love, which as Michael Caen says, makes us "rediscover cinema in black and white," and which is "simply the image of physical love." Or the constant use of flashfor- wards which shows Diego's fears, hopes, limits and depths of his vision. Even a superficial comparison with the flashbacks of "Muriel" and L'anneesDerniere" will reveal the directness of "La Guerre" compared with the earlier films, which existed and were created within a reality peculiar to them- selves. These examples are to in- dicate that Resnais has not re- stricted the plasticity of film to some over-riding story organism. The film has developed its own literature. In the final analysis I am over- whelmed by Resnais' complete mastery of the medium. "La Guer- re" makes even "Blow-up" look like a sophomoric essay in com- position. It is a great film, a mas- terpiece, a . Across Campus FRIDAY, MARCH 17 7:00 and 9:05 p.m. - Cinema Guild presents "Les Quartes Cents Coups" The 400 Blows) as part of a Francios Truffant week- end in the Architecture Aud. 8:00 p.m.-The Department of Speech University Players present Arthur Miller's "After the Fall" in Trueblood Aud. 8:30 p.m.-The School of Music presents the University Arts Chorale and Womne's Choir, May- nard Klein directing, in Rackham Lecture Hall. SATURDAY, MARCH 18 7:00 and 9:05 p.m. - Cinema Guild presents "Tirez Sur le Pianiste Shoot the Piano Player)" as part of a Francois Truffant weekend in the Architecture Aud. 8:00 p.m.-The Department of Speech University Players present Arthur Miller's "After the Fall" in Trueblood Aud. Phone 434-0130 E e&4" ww On.CARPENTER ROAD CINIMk BU- ILD TONIGHT & TOMORROW THE 400* BLOWS "Every child must receive his four hundred blows before reaching adulthood." -French addage French, with subtitles 7:00 & 9:00 ARCH ITECTURE AUD. STILL ONLY 50cm= "There is a lot of 'LA in 'BLOW-UP' "! DOLCE VITA' -Louis Cook, Free Press "A STUNNING PICTURE A FASCINATING PICTURE about the matter of personal in- volvement and emotional commit- ment in a jazzed-up, media-hook- ed world!" -Bosley Crowther, New York Times "SO STUNNING THAT YOU WANT TO SEE IT MORE THAN ONCE!" -Archer Winsten, New York Post "MOST TALKED- ABOUT OF THE NEW MOVIES!" -Dick Osgood, WXYZ FIRST OPEN 6:30 P.M. FIRS RUN FREE HEATERS RU NOW SHOWING "I CANNOT IMAGINE THAT ANYONE WHO TAKES MOVIES SERIOUSLY WILL WANT TO MISS 'BLOW- UP' "! -Jay Carr, Detroit News ST N Michelangelo Antonioni 's first English language film starring Vanessa Redgrave BLOW-UP cO-storring 4TH GREAT WEEK David Hemmings Sarah Miles COLOR A Premier Productions Co., Inc. Release By PAUL SAWYER I still do not know why a film >f the importance of "The 400 Blows" has been seen by so few college-age people interested in the cinema. It is, for example, a better film than the much-dis- cussed' "Shoot the Piano Player," and was the film which overnight made Truffaut's reputation as one of Europe's foremost young direc- tors. It was released, I think, just before ."Breathless," and it con- tains, in full-blown form all the characteristics associated with the New Wave - the hand-held camera, a breezy, informal style and an impression of spontaneity. Yet it, remains a masterpiece, apart from any historical consid- erations. It is one of those works of "art-in this sense it remainds me of "The Catcher in the Rye"- which one hesitates to call "great," yet which are so passion- ately conceived and catch hold of the viewer's imagination with such force that they continue to haunt the mind long ;after other com- parable works have been forgot- ten. The title comes from the French expression for "growing pains." Whenever a youngster gets in trouble, he is said to be receiving "one of his 400 blows." The sub- ject matter is not, consequently, very unusual, and in the hands of a lesser director, the film could be quite ordinary. The first half records -the routine accidents and escapades of a likable trouble- maker. But like a Hardy novel, the minor difficulties snowball, until Antoine, the hero, is arrested and sent to a reformatory. The whole first half retains a remarkably uninvolved point of view. None of the characters is free from fault; "blame," where it is relevant is judiciously balanced among the boy, the parents and the others involved. But after Antoine's arrest and subsequent mistreatment at the hands of a brutal system (based on Truffaut's own childhood), the film takes on a grimmer, more passionate tone. By the end An- toine, like Lear, is clearly more sinned against than sinning, and he grows into the dimensions of a kind of tragic hero, almost an em- bodiment of all the brutalized vic- tims of society. Yet Antoine is never a mere pup- pet Everybody. He is a remar - ably vital and ingenious creation, and it is by the force of his char- acterization that the film ulti- mately stands or falls. Jean-Pierre Leaud gives an incredible perform- nothing to stand on, inside a re- ance. vowving drum at an amusement Film-acting has an advantage park; the blurred, dancing lights over the stage in that the screen of the Paris streets, shot from actor is a fuller embodiment than the paddy-wagon that is taking the stage performance can ever the boy away; or the sinister be. He can become in a very lit- shadows cast by the cage he is eral sense the character he is kept in overnight. ROBERT E KE STACK SOMMER an NNY CHRISTIAN dN KWM a MARQUA DI Shown 7:05 & 10:4 DIAL 8-6416 Rcommefxed for mature audko I. I playing, sometimes by merely be- ing "himself," sometimes without any previous acting experience. Leaud's gestures, his manner- isms, his face-all of which take on enormous importance in a film performance -- are perfect: his bright, serious, searching eyes, his sudden gushes and starts, his de- fensive shrugs and hurt, down- ward glances, Truffaut carried this equivalence of actor and character to an extreme by letting Leaud improvise an entire scene - the scene with the psychologist - by describing events from his own life. Like most outstanding New Wave films, "The 400 Blows" could nev- er have been anything but a film. The narrative and dialogue are relatively slight; rather, the story is told less by dialogue than by the meanings suggested in a va- riety of inspired images-the boy whirling around and around, pin- ned against the wall and with And only the cinema could have produced something like the amaz- ing, famous final sequence, where the boy escapes from the reform- atory and runs out to sea, conclud- ing with the final frozen close-up shot that is at once so powerful and so profoundly suggestive. Some people have seen in this shot the wronged hero personally confront- ing the audience. It is actually a close copy of an earlier freeze shot, representing Antoine's mug portrait, and seems to suggest that the boy is doomed to suffer the life of a criminal and an out- cast. If he is indeed doomed, it is not because of anything in him alone, but because of the cold gaze of an unsympathetic society which will never look behind the mug shot it has branded him with. "The 400 Blows" is a hard and a beautiful film, born out of fierce indignation and profound compas- sion. 0 ALSO: HOERRS TECHNICOLOR* s.hown at -Onl Read Daily Classifieds "YOUa'D BETTER GO SEE IT AS SOON AS YOU CAN. Sylvie is superb--playing the leading role inr a manner that should etch it. forever on the memories of those who see the film. Delightful and touching." - Crowther, N.Y. Times the Walter Reade Organization. Inc. presents BERTOLT BRECHT'S STARRING SYLVIE DIRECTED BY RENE ALLIO STARTING TODAY-DIAL 5-6290 French Dialogue, English Subtitles ,7 I '! '°" I ENDS TONIGHT TATE 15 :15 NILAN 5:15 7:20 !IB Dial 920 NO 2-6264. iirtli :{ri ": :d .. rmamm mm m#E -TOMORROW- L j *a I 3 ,.1 rJ~ .I I I U :~starrngf