Monday, March 17, 2014

"Weekend" (2011)


Andrew Haigh’s « Weekend » is one of the most beautiful and compelling love stories I have ever had the privilege to watch, a film possessed in every frame by the most important quality that defines a film and indeed every work of art and entertainment: Sincerity. This quality is particularly welcome in a film centered on a relationship that is built by it; by the feelings the two lovers bring out in each other, and the protagonist’s subsequent attitude towards his sexuality.

Russell (Tom Cullen) is a sensitive young gay man who lives alone in his apartment. He is first seen attending a party at his best friend’s house along with friends and family. While he appears to fit in and gets along well with them, the lack of spatialization due to the closeness of shots and length of the focal suggest he does not feel completely at home. His friends lead the conversations for the entirety of the scene. Their dialogue itself does not reveal anything important about them, but Russell's reactions to themconvey just enough for us to know of his discontent.  However, it is not until he leaves and goes into a nightclub, where a similarly-aged young man catches his eye, that the information of his homosexuality is communicated to the audience.



After a cat-and-mouse game in and out of the toilets, Russell takes him home and spends the night with him. The following morning, we learn that the man’s name is Glen (Chris New). After some post-coital small talk, Glen admits that their tryst was part of an artistic project he’s working on. With a tape recorder, he asks Russell – challenges would be a more accurate word – to recall their one-night-stand in as much detail as he can remember, and describe how he felt about it. After some coaxing, Russell agrees.

In a long shot regularly panning from Russell’s face to Glen’s, the viewer bears close witness to the birth of two beautiful characters and the seeds of an equally beautiful relationship. Despite his embarrassment, Russell traces all the steps of their night, contradicting Glen on a few details. This is a rough sketch of what their exchanges will be like: A contradictory mixture of oppositions and discoveries. Glen counters Russell’s self-consciousness with relaxed cockiness and buoyancy. The goal of his project, he explains, is to expose the audience to a frank discussion about gay sex. As he will frequently argue throughout the film, society, in spite of its progress and tolerance, remains doggedly heteronormative and expects gays to conform to its behavioral norms; be gay, but not too gay. Talk about your sexuality, but don’t shove it down our throats like we do to you in every form of art and media.

This conformity is precisely one of Russell’s foremost traits and one of the sources of his lack of self-assurance. While he is out to his best friend Jamie and the latter’s family and friends, he is still reluctant to discuss his feelings openly and be himself for all to see. Whether it’s homophobic insults from passing kids, teenagers making “spot-the-gay-guy” jokes on the bus while blissfully unaware that there’s one right next to them or a coworker graphically boasting about how he can stick four fingers up a woman’s vagina, Russell is constantly reminded of his otherness.


What makes this situation even more difficult for him is the fact that he is an orphan. This status presents him with a major challenge that, quite ironically, many gays would likely find convenient in theory: He never had any parents to come out to. Having grown up in foster homes, Russell feels even more of an outsider than he normally would. How is one supposed to define one’s personal identity without the recognizable group of reference that constitutes a family?

Shot with mostly long-to-middle focals, primarily direct sound and no recognizable actors, “Weekend”’s naturalism immerses the viewer as an invisible observer. Many shots are obscured by the blurry bodies of extras or furniture in the foreground. Initially used to make the audience share Russell’s discomfort and oppression, most notably in the scene with the decidedly heterosexual coworker, this visual attribute gradually ceases to be unnerving as Russell and Glen’s relationship evolves from sexual and intellectual attraction into genuine tenderness.



This evolution reaches a pinnacle during a long sequence in Russell’s apartment on the night before Glen has to leave for America. Fuelled by cocaine, poppers and hints about Glen’s past romantic life dropped at a previous party, Russell and Glen confront each other on their personal attitudes towards their sexuality and themselves in general. Through their fights, personal truths break out. Russell calls out Glen on what he feels is the incompatibility between his denunciation of inequality and his dismissal of commitment. From his journal, he recalls an encounter with a married man and the sense of shame and guilt as he thought about him going home to his wife and kissing his children goodnight. It becomes clear that Glen has come to represent both an ideal of sexual comfort as well as a hopeful anchor to a life of stability and happiness. Glen’s mask of opinionated cynicism comes down, but not without a fight.


Thus, love appears in “Weekend” as a battlefield in which victory is achieved by both parties when they build their relationship with remaining pieces picked up after each attack. It is a complicated, maddening thing, yet entirely worthwhile for the improvement it creates within each lover. While my own relationship with my wonderful girlfriend Deanna is fortunately free of such emotional violence, I nevertheless recognized the truth of Russell and Glen’s love for each other in the unflinching honesty they bring out of each other.

As Russell, Tom Cullen gives the impression of constantly wading through an inner minefield in his quest for purpose and self-acceptance. It’s a superbly understated performance, one of the best seen in 2011. However, the actor whose presence endures the most, long after the film’s conclusion, is Chris New, an aptly-named actor with the face of a shorter Kevin Durand, the voice of a younger Jude Law and raw natural talent that evokes the great Tom Hardy. Doubtless many actors would have tried to make Glen likeable in spite of his smugness and devil-may-care attitude. Not many would have imbued him with the soul Chris New brings to him, and even fewer would have had the courage to dare the audience to accept him as he is.



For all the preceding paragraphs, I still feel I have not done enough justice to “Weekend”’s power and splendor. It should be experienced by all who have ever experienced a relationship – long-term or short-term as in the film’s case – that fundamentally changed them as human beings. While the gay condition is a prominent and recurring theme within the film, it is not what defines it. As in real life, the characters’ humanity far supersedes their sexuality.

Thursday, March 13, 2014

"Afternoon Delight"


Author's note: This review was written three years before director Joey Soloway came out as non-binary and genderqueer. Out of respect, the first paragraph has been modified in accordance with their desire to be referred to by gender-neutral pronouns.

Additional note: It has been brought to my attention that the director's first name is now Joey. I have made additional modifications to reflect this.

Depicting the social contradictions of middle-class suburban life is something of a national pastime in American cinema, as famously demonstrated by Sam Mendes’s American Beauty and Revolutionary Road, Richard Kelly’s Donnie Darko and much of Todd Solondz’s career. In that respect, Afternoon Delight is not particularly original. What makes it somewhat refreshing – and separates it from the main flaws of American Beauty and Donnie Darko – is the consistent compassion writer-director Joey Soloway has for their main characters.

On paper, the premise sounds ripe for cliché and convention: A bored, sexually frustrated Jewish housewife meets a young stripper whom she takes under her wing, ostensibly out of kindness but with the underlying hope that it will help her spice up her marriage and escape the dreariness of attending meetings with irritating fellow Jewish housewives and putting up with their vanity and falseness.

While some supporting characters, such as ringleader Jennie (Michaela Watkins) remain firmly two-dimensional at best, the film’s strength lies in the complicated relationship between protagonist Rachel (Kathryn Hahn) and stripper McKenna (Juno Temple). They meet when Rachel’s best friend Stephanie (Jessica St. Clair) takes her to a strip club, where McKenna gives Rachel a private lap-dance. Troubled by her youth and sexual confidence, Rachel meets her again in the street the following week, and they become friends. When McKenna finds herself homeless following an incident with a borrowed car, Rachel allows her to stay in the house, much to the chagrin of her husband Jeff (Josh Radnor).



Over the course of these events, Rachel has learned that McKenna never knew her father, is 55 days sober and, to top it all, an independent prostitute. What shocks and frightens her best friend and husband also frightens her, yet it also gives her further purpose in interacting with her. “I want to help her out”, she tells herself and her husband, despite McKenna giving no sign that she takes anything but joy and satisfaction out of her job. In spite of their friendship, Rachel hides McKenna’s true profession by claiming to her friends that she’s her 5 year-old son’s new nanny. Inevitably, she trips over it when the wives suggest McKenna look after their daughters during a trip. Despite trusting her with babysitting their son, the couple makes an excuse to get someone else to do it instead. But none of these mixed signals of rejection and affection appear to faze McKenna. She acknowledges them but does not voice any complaints to Rachel.
The ambiguity of the two women’s interactions reaches a peak point when McKenna offers an exhausted Rachel a foot massage that escalates to her thighs and chest. While McKenna’s intentions are clearly innocuous, Rachel experiences the massage with such frightening sensuality that she ends it by suddenly rising, pushing McKenna to the side and getting on top of her – to hit her or have sex with her? The tension remains unquestioned as Rachel just sits down on the edge of her bed and McKenna leaves. It is then comically exacerbated when Rachel calls Jeff from his work and the two proceed to have their first quasi-satisfying sexual experience in six months. McKenna’s presence has officially begun to affect their life.


From this point on, the film’s screenplay could take an easy way and teach its characters a lesson about how the pitied prostitute leads a more fulfilling and happier life than the respectable suburbanites. Mercifully, it chooses instead to stay focused on Rachel’s self-searching quest for happiness. After a day spent at a boring children’s party with her “friends”, during which Jeff escapes to go surfing with the other husbands, Rachel decides to accompany McKenna to meet one of her clients and watch them have sex. What follows is one of the film’s most emotionally complex sequences, confronting Rachel to both her prejudices about sex work and her own sexual insecurities and desires.

The sight of McKenna’s client – an ageing overweight man – would likely provoke discomfort if not outright disgust, as he is old enough to be McKenna’s father and one would easily be quick to label him a dirty old pervert. Any possible feelings of disgust are instantly challenged by the friendly and polite rapport that is established between himself and McKenna; they interact in the same way a physical therapist might interact with a long-time patient at his home. He greets the two women with respect, offers them a drink and demonstrates great sensitivity to Rachel’s nervousness and uneasiness. He assures her that she is perfectly free to leave should the situation prove too much for her.
In the bedroom, the tryst begins with McKenna performing fellatio on the man. Rachel initially interrupts the proceeding with nervous falsely-casual small talk, then forces herself to silence. Kathryn Hahn’s performance in this scene is the key to its power. Her face is a mask of confused emotions throughout the entire session. Apart from McKenna’s body, which we crucially see relatively little of, everything about the situation should invite disgust and it does to a certain extent. Yet Rachel’s eyes also convey a mixture of fear and arousal, particularly when the sex turns penetrative and the man asks her to hold his hand while he orgasms. For the first time, Rachel is the spectator of sexual intercourse in a way that she has never experienced before, between two people whose relationship is both cordial and commercial. That, more than the sight of a flabby-chested old man having sex with a 24 year-old woman, is what disturbs Rachel the most.


Kathryn Hahn’s rich and impeccably-timed performance is one of the film’s greatest assets. She runs a wide gamut of human emotions – often simultaneously, as the aforementioned scene attests – and never overacts once. This stays consistent even during the film’s climactic alternating montage of husbands’ night and wives’ night. The latter gives an inebriated Rachel the chance to both finally vent her repressed distaste for her friends’ habits and lament her ruined dream of becoming a war journalist due to an abortion in college that concurrently ended her pregnancy, her college education and her years of promiscuity. It’s the kind of scene in which overacting is almost inevitable, but Hahn never goes further than she needs to.


Meanwhile, the husbands are left to smoke pot and play poker. Their evening is troubled when McKenna, having cracked under the pressure of the exhaustion and downed half a bottle of vodka, gets in on the fun. Save an embarrassed Jeff, the husbands are ecstatic at the prospect of a sexy young woman joining their party. Pretty soon, they’re all dancing to the music they record in their spare time. Their enthusiasm soon turns to discomfort, however, as McKenna dances more and more seductively until she’s back at doing what she does best – stripping erotically. The men are made uncomfortable by behaviour that should normally arouse them. By being in control of her own sexuality and asserting its power over them on her own terms, McKenna challenges the husbands’ masculinity.
Both scenes involve the main characters upsetting their respective parties by making their fellow guests increasingly uncomfortable with their frankness. It’s a fairly common trope in suburban dramas, but whose treatment deftly avoids cliché thanks to the actresses’ performances and cinematographer Jim Frohna’s superb camerawork. Both scenes are filmed in close shots that pan across the characters’ faces and bodies and long focal lenses that blur much of the background. Most importantly, the camera never gets too lost in the scene’s rhythm and the temptation to show off too much of the actors’ skills for their own sake is not obeyed. The audience is pulled away or cut away just in time so that the essential is not lost.

Long focal lens shots and close framing constitute many of the film’s most important scenes. These include the previously discussed scenes but its first important occurrence is in the lap-dance scene where Rachel and McKenna first meet. When it’s not focused on McKenna’s face or butt, the camera is guided by her seductive dance moves towards Rachel, making the atmosphere as intimate and disquieting as many first-time sexual experiences tend to be.


After the alternating montage culminates dramatically, the film begins to lose water and fall back into familiar formula territory: McKenna leaves the house and Rachel is excommunicated from her group of so-called friends. Her marriage with Jeff appears to crumble as he decides to leave the house as well, and her psychiatrist (Jane Lynch, giving a decent performance in a superficial role), after spending most of their sessions citing her own relationship with her female partner as an example, ends up crying in her arms about their own recent breakup. This is the weakest, most predictable and conventional part of the film, where Rachel has to face the decisions of her actions and learn from the film’s events lest she never find happiness. One can almost see the words “Dark Night Of The Soul” pasted on the screen after being ripped from Blake Snyder’s wretched Save The Cat! book.

Yet the ending itself is not without its strengths. It seems the screenplay itself is aware that the crux of what it had to say about people has been said. There isn’t anything inherently new in its exposure of the inner crises that result from the contradiction between finding and being one’s self and wanting to please people. Yet it draws its value by investing itself in its characters, not as representatives of talking points but as full and complete human beings. That Kathryn Hahn was not even considered by the Academy as a potential nominee for Best Actress in a Leading Role says much about its member’s lack of touch with humanity. Her portrayal of Rachel ranks as one of the most authentic human beings put to the big screen in 2013.

Much commendation must also be given to Juno Temple, a bold and versatile actress who never ceases to surprise and excite. First noticed as a gutsy British sexpot in Gregg Araki’s 2010 apocalyptic sex comedy “Kaboom”, she often plays women with a very open and strong sexuality but never reduces them to just that and always gives each one a distinct soul. If any recognition for exceptional actors remains, she should be a major star by the end of the decade. Her casual, almost innocent sex appeal, recalls Shirley MacLaine’s titular performance in Billy Wilder’s “Irma La Douce”. But McKenna goes beyond the enduring hooker-with-a-heart-of-gold archetype. No matter how tempting it may be to further reinforce the story’s point, she is not idealized or held up as an example. She may be more free-spirited, more comfortable with her sexuality and less concerned about what other people think of her than Rachel, Jeff or their friends, but she has problems and flaws of her own. She may have been, as Rachel put it, “a bomb in their family” but she had to happen in order for their plights to be exposed. While a less decisive ending in the manner of “Un Air De Famille” would have been preferable, sitting through the final act is made worth it by the film’s final, beautiful scene: A reunited Rachel and Jeff, having talked things through and decided to give their marriage a second chance, make real tender love for the first time in a long time, culminating in Rachel crying tears of joy and pleasure as she orgasms before the credits roll. That final image embodies both the film and Kathryn Hahn’s performance throughout it: An uneven but tremendously satisfying rollercoaster of confused emotions.

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

"The Children's Hour"


Little Rosaline’s composure decreases visibly as a high close-up of her blackmailer’s face reminds her not-so-subtly of the threat to be carried out should she not back up her malicious lie. Her teacher Martha (Shirley MacLaine), one of the two objects of said lie, puts her hands on her shoulders and urges her to tell the truth. Fellow teacher and lie victim Karen (Audrey Hepburn), in a perfectly centralized medium-close-up, looks uneasily as the child reaches boiling point. Seeing the girl’s discomfort, blackmailer Mary (Karen Balkin) rises from the sofa to address her puritan grandmother (Fay Bainter), in two medium shots connected by Mary’s movement. At that moment, Rosaline jumps up from the sofa in a sudden-close up and hysterically screams that everything Mary said was true. The two female teachers of the all-girl school they both attend are indeed having a homosexual affair.





This narratively crucial moment serves as a representative of the film’s overall tone, its strengths and its weaknesses. William Wyler’s adaptation of Lillian Hellman’s play “The Children’s Hour” came out in 1961 – coincidentally the same year in which Basil Dearden’s equally groundbreaking yet vastly inferior “Victim” became the first mainstream film to use the word “homosexual” – and it shows in both its endeavor to tackle a previously unmentionable subject and its stylistic appearance. The film’s modern French New Wave-inspired look seems to be made as a conscious parallel to the attempt at breaking the taboo of homosexuality in a Hollywood film yet, much like the treatment of the subject itself, it is often clumsy but undeniably sincere.

Unlike Dearden’s tedious, academic Hitchcock thriller counterfeit, “The Children’s Hour” feels alive and alert. The close shots, sudden cuts and at times uncertain continuity echo Wyler’s mixture of courage and fear in his address of the subject matter. The film may be uneven and occasionally stumble but it avoids the aesthetic mistake “Victim” made by not falling back on old ways to show something new, opting instead to blaze a trail into the future using new tools, even if it means burning itself in the process.

The film indeed suffers mainly from its lack of subtlety. It’s the kind of Tennessee Williams-inspired play-based melodrama in which characters can go into hysterical monologues and speeches rather than let the camera speak for them by capturing unspoken feelings on their faces. This, thankfully, is achieved and lead actresses Audrey Hepburn and Shirley Maclaine are to be commended for their performances, even if the latter – much like her dialogue – can find herself prone to unnecessary hysterics. They are both at their best in conveying their feelings through their eyes.


So good, in particular, is Audrey Hepburn’s performance that it raises a question that the screenplay never dares to voice: What if the lie affected her so much that she might have started to turn it into truth? Having lost a libel case and their jobs, the two women have been made outcasts by all but Karen’s devoted fiancée Joe (James Garner) yet the experience has overwhelmed her. In one of the film’s harshest scenes, she demands that he ask her the question he has suppressed all this time: Is it true? The answer is no, but the very fact that the question occurred to him is enough for her to break off the engagement. Just after that, Martha tearfully admits that she has indeed been repressing romantic and sexual feelings for her friend.



On their own, these two scenes need not have gone any further than what is shown, but Audrey Hepburn’s conflicted performance, intentionally or not, leads one to wonder the extent of the changes brought upon by the lie. If a rumour were to be spread that you were gay, particularly in a time when homosexuality was still considered wrong and sinful by a vast majority of Americans, and everybody but two or three people close to you believed it, would you not start wondering if it were true after a while? The power of public consensus is an insidious thing, particularly if it involves questioning your own reality. That the film does not delve any further into that possibility is understandable given the ground already covered, but one cannot help but feel there may be an even better film struggling to get out through that avenue.


The film’s major weakness in the character of Mary and the bad hamminess of her actress Karen Balkin. She is simply too one-dimensional to be taken seriously as a human being. She is established as a cruel bullying selfish liar from the beginning and never wavers. Thomas Vinterberg’s excellent “The Hunt” was more subtle and nuanced. The film was also about a lie told by a child about a teacher’s sexuality; a lie that also ruins his life, except the charges are far more serious since he is accused of child molestation. In that film, the little girl’s lie was the product of a series of specific events and circumstances, and was told with neither real malice nor true realization of its implications and consequences.

Still, “The Children’s Hour” should be accepted for the good and flawed work of art that it is, not merely for being one of the first Hollywood films to attempt to portray homosexuality both openly and with something approaching sympathy. As is the case with human beings, its weaknesses make it all the more beautiful by their honesty.

Monday, March 10, 2014

"The War Is Over"

On the 1st of March 2014, Cinema lost one of its most fearless adventurers at the age of 91. The director of such important milestones as “Hiroshima Mon Amour” and “Nuit Et Brouillard” (Night And Fog), Alain Resnais spent his long and fruitful career reinventing his craft and pursuing new ways to push the boundaries of cinematic language. While “La Guerre Est Finie” (The War Is Over) does not quite reach the heights of “Mon Oncle D’Amérique” (My American Uncle), “Providence” or “L’Année Dernière À Marienbad” (Last Year At Marienbad”), it remains a significant work of art both as a representation of the radical politics of 1960s Europe – both stylistically and thematically – and as an introduction to Resnais’s films for uninitiated beginners. I still have too much to learn to truly do justice to the richness of the film, but I shall do my best anyway.

 
The film stars Italian-French actor Yves Montand as a Spanish communist agent sneaking back and forth from Spain to France to meet fellow party members and distribute propaganda. This is the first of several films - including Costa-Gavras’s masterful “L’Aveu” (The Confession) – in which Montand would play a communist confronted with the party’s unpleasant realities, mirroring his own political journey from ardent communist to moderate leftist. “La Guerre Est Finie” is not so much a criticism of the communist ideology so much as the portrait of a man whose personal experience of reality conflicts with his fellow travelers’ blind and dangerous idealism.

The film opens with Diego Mora (Yves Montand) sneaking back to France under one of his many aliases in order to warn his superiors of a recent sting operation in Madrid that resulted in the capture and killing of many fellow agents. The scene alternates between shots of Diego and his accomplice in the car exchanging dialogue, point-of-view shots of the car’s exterior surroundings and seemingly incongruous shots representing, among other things:

-          Diego running from an airport to the very car he’s in.


-          A man opening an apartment door from the point of view of his unseen visitor.


-          The same man coming out of a door next to another door in which another man had previously gone through.


-          Diego running towards a queue.


-          Diego running in a train.


-          Diego running to catch a train.


-          Diego missing a train.


-          Diego running out of a car and into a train station.


-          Diego meeting the previously-mentioned man and embracing him.

 
All of this is set to Diego’s accomplice complaining about Spain’s lack of petrol stations and how he’d be indulging in tourist activities if it weren’t for him. This gives the audience a taste of what the rest of the film’s experience will be: A constant voyage in time and the mind, the present reality frequently interrupted by brief trips into Diego’s mind as he flashes to the past, the future or his imagining of past, future or present events elsewhere. Some shots – such as individual women each shown walking towards the same bar – do not make sense until later scenes connect with them – in the aforementioned case, when Diego goes to said bar to spy on the naive idealistic young daughter (Geneviève Bujold) of a man who has willingly lent him his identity.





These flashes are frequently related to Diego’s central problem: He has returned to Paris to warn his superiors about the sting operation, only for them to chastise him for leaving just as fellow agent Juan (Jean-François Rémi) was on his way to Madrid to meet him. Worsening his comrade’s dangerous situation is the refusal of the party leaders to take the threat seriously and their insistence in going along with a planned general strike. The flashes – as well as the aliases – illustrate Diego’s fragmented, wandering state of mind, but they also represent one of the major recurring themes in Alain Resnais’s work: The relationship between time and one’s personal perception of it, often in the form of real or imagined memories. This makes certain scenes particularly ambiguous, such as the scene in Diego’s apartment after his long-time lover Marianne (the exquisitely androgynous Ingrid Thulin) tells him she wants a child from him. Diego is shown entering a room to check on a sleeping boy. We naturally assume it to be Marianne’s child from a previous relationship and the clear sounds of Diego’s movements and activity – as opposed to the silence of the flashes – encourage us to perceive it as real. Yet the child is never mentioned again. Whether he exists or not, the connection is clear.

 
In that respect “La Guerre Est Finie”, in defiance of its seemingly optimistic title – taken from fascist General Francisco Franco’s own words at the end of the Spanish Civil War – is a bittersweet portrait of a lost cause known only to its protagonist as such. Diego communicates his thoughts in the form of highly literary voice-overs that resemble prose poems – another recurring element of Resnais’s work. In these, Diego gives the viewer a summary of the events the pictures hint at, all while referring to himself in the second person, as if consciously trying to remind himself of what he has experienced and what he is currently experiencing. Diego’s self-talk conveys bitterness and disillusion combined with envy for his fellow travelers’ idealism.

This gradual political disenchantment is matched by his relationship with the film’s major female characters, Ingrid Thulin’s Marianne and Geneviève Bujold’s Nadine. Diego spends his first night in Paris with the latter, enjoying a one-night-stand with her just after she remarks that he is indeed old enough to be her father – a statement and sequence made more disturbing today in light of Montand’s real-life stepdaughter Catherine Allégret’s allegations that he sexually abused her from the age of five until adulthood.

 
Ugly hindsight aside, Nadine’s youth and candid enthusiasm for Diego’s work acts as a counterpoint to both his own lassitude and his superiors’ stubborn denial of reality, as well as a bittersweet reminder of his own obsolescence. More importantly, she solidifies her position as Marianne’s opposite number – despite the two never meeting or, indeed, seeming aware of each other’s existence. Marianne believes in communism implicitly, and shares the party’s optimism about a glorious general strike that will bring down Franco’s fascist regime; so much so that she is begging Diego to cease his life of lies and absences, and to take her with him to Spain so that they can raise a child there together.

Diego’s love for Marianne is indisputable. However, he is all too aware that her dream, much like his boss’s, is impossible. And while he is more open with her about his frustrations than with most other characters, she is as incapable to convince as they are. The only thing Diego can truly do is take as much advantage as he can of what little bursts of happiness and pleasure he has left. The most remarkable of such bursts is one of the most beautiful and erotic sex scenes ever put to film, set after Marianne’s friend Bill (Gérard Séty) and his annoyingly inquisitive wife Agnès (Annie Fargue) have finally left the two alone together. The scene is edited in close shots of Marianne’s body parts – feet, back, face, head & torso – and different steps in the progress of their sexual act, with little obvious continuity. Ingrid Thulin’s magnificent acting deserves to be credited for this scene’s beauty: Equally overwhelmed with bliss and sadness, halfway across tears and pleasure, she vividly captures a scary and mysterious emotional place seldom seen in the depiction of sexual relations between two lovers. The scene is reminiscent of the stunning post-opening credits close-ups of Emmanuelle Riva and Eiji Okada’s mingled bodies in “Hiroshima Mon Amour”.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Like his aforementioned masterpiece, Resnais creates a parallel between love and politics, in this case connecting romantic/sexual desire with political desire, the love of a woman and the love of a cause. Just as he knows that any attempt to replace Franco’s regime with a communist regime is doomed to failure, Diego also knows that Marianne’s dream for them will surely result in his death. Yet he remains committed to both of them. The film ends with him going to Spain both as a concession to out-of-touch party leaders in order to save his endangered friend and as a concession to Marianne’s desire to start a new life with him. His doom is made all the more certain by the police’s discovery of Nadine’s real father’s real passport. No matter what course of action he takes, the only issue for Diego, as for communism, is death. As indeed, 25 years later, History would confirm.