Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
Moderator: MichaelB
- dda1996a
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Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
Which is what always interested me in him; as I noted above I adore Lynch, Borges Pynchon and the likes. I just sometimes find that the interesting parts of his films contend with lesser, not as interesting parts (I can say yet if these always involve theatrical productions). Which is why I enormously enjoyed Nous Appartient, and modernly enjoyed Va Savoir (in that film, search for lost play and the young blonde is ace, actual production less so).
I meant the length prohibiting only in that I'm not always in the middle for a 3 hour film. I never let length be a factor, but I don't rush to watch three hour films every day.
From the Rivette box, which should I start with then? Noroit, Merry or Duelle?
I meant the length prohibiting only in that I'm not always in the middle for a 3 hour film. I never let length be a factor, but I don't rush to watch three hour films every day.
From the Rivette box, which should I start with then? Noroit, Merry or Duelle?
- spectre
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Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
All are difficult in their own way. Duelle is the most obviously Rivettian, if it makes any sense to say that – so perhaps start with that one? Otherwise, Merry-Go-Round is fun but feels unfinished, and Noroit is just ... weird.
- Michael Kerpan
- Spelling Bee Champeen
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Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
Seconded.furbicide wrote:All are difficult in their own way. Duelle is the most obviously Rivettian, if it makes any sense to say that – so perhaps start with that one? Otherwise, Merry-Go-Round is fun but feels unfinished, and Noroit is just ... weird.
I would also recommend Secret defense (translation is something like Top Secret) and Gang of Four -- if they are still findable.
- Satori
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Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
I like this observation a lot. I remember a similar conversation about "difficulty" came up in the Arrow thread and I continue to have a hard time understanding Rivette as "difficult."Drucker wrote: There is a mindset to get in when watching a Rivette film, and that's what makes them "difficult", not the length.
Indeed, what does it mean to say that a film or filmmaker is difficult? Perhaps films that are so densely allusive that they require a good deal of "outside" knowledge before viewing? Rivette is nothing like this, though. While there are allusions to film genres or even specific filmmakers, these are just fun little extras that are by no means required in order to enjoy the films. There is nothing to "get" in Rivette; everything is pretty much on the surface. The pleasure of Rivette is in the experience: the surrender to the flow of his wacky narratives and characters.
It seems to me that the discourse of difficulty presumes an idea of mastery. Certain films are easy to master while others are more difficult. This also implies a centralized meaning that it is the task of the viewer to reveal. Ironically, Rivette's narratives allegorize this kind of hermeneutic with their various conspiracies. Rivettes's films are, at the level of surface content, rejections of precisely the search for meaning that I think undergirds the entire discourse of difficulty!
So, to return to Drucker's quite incisive observation above, I would argue that one's enjoyment of Rivette is in large part determined by whether or not one thinks about film in terms of "uncovering a meaning" or in terms of an experience. The latter is the mindset that Rivette requires.
I think it is important that this not be misunderstood as a kind of elitism, either, as through only a "select few" are worthy of Rivette. That is nonsense. Another thing the discourse of difficulty does is to make cinephilia into a kind of video game: level 1 is contemporary Hollywood, level 2 is Kubrick and Scorsese, level 3 is Truffaut and Kurosawa, and then eventually you can "beat" enough of the levels to reach the heights of Rivette, Akerman, and Straub/Huillet. The result is that people want to prove their high level by making sure they like all the appropriate filmmakers. Worse, people who don't like Rivette get defensive, as if they think their cinephilia is being called into question. This is all absurd, of course, but I sense this subtext in conversations about difficulty.
- Michael Kerpan
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Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
I find that I respond to most of Kiyoshi Kurosawa's best work in much the same way I respond to Rivette. Don't worry about "meaning" -- just go along with the flow. 
- Gregory
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 8:07 pm
Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
Related to getting into the right mind-set for Rivette, I often think of what Francisco Valente wrote in the MoC Le Pont du Nord booklet essay:
Watching a Rivette film is like going for a walk in your city and not knowing what will happen and whom you will meet. Or rather, like those rare, beautiful days when you come home and feel that you never could have planned what you just went through. That is, a mixture of chance, improvisation, and quick but thoughtfully planned decisions exclusively based on your wildest desires and curiosity.
- dda1996a
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Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
I think difficult films for me are split into two-
Simply tough films to watch i.e Haneke, Irreversible, Bergman
And films that are obtuse and complex and usually also slow like Tarkovsky, Dreyer and Tarr.
I like all these that I listed, but I never considered Rivette difficult. My questions were simply because unlike some other Directors, I felt that personally starting with Out 1 was a mistake, whereas starting with something like Paris Nous Appartient or Va Savoir introduces his type of film while being more approachable (2 hours v 12 hours).
I'm though interested if Huliet and Straub are actually worth exploring. Watched three of their short films and found nothing except a theoretical hypothesis that wasn't cinematically interesting. Just filming actors speak out lines from a book doesn't interest me. But I'll give three of their longer films a chance.
Simply tough films to watch i.e Haneke, Irreversible, Bergman
And films that are obtuse and complex and usually also slow like Tarkovsky, Dreyer and Tarr.
I like all these that I listed, but I never considered Rivette difficult. My questions were simply because unlike some other Directors, I felt that personally starting with Out 1 was a mistake, whereas starting with something like Paris Nous Appartient or Va Savoir introduces his type of film while being more approachable (2 hours v 12 hours).
I'm though interested if Huliet and Straub are actually worth exploring. Watched three of their short films and found nothing except a theoretical hypothesis that wasn't cinematically interesting. Just filming actors speak out lines from a book doesn't interest me. But I'll give three of their longer films a chance.
- MichaelB
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Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
Definitely don't give up on them until you see Chronicle of Anna Magdalena Bach.
- spectre
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Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
Not Reconciled and Class Relations are also amazing – the former in particular is much more formally dynamic than some of their other work.
Back to Rivette, I wouldn't necessarily say that all of his films are 'difficult' – apart from the slightly forbidding running times, anyone can get into, for instance, Celine and Julie Go Boating or La Belle Noiseuse, and even Out 1 is perfectly accessible if you stick with it; the same goes for most of his '80s films. I do find his late '70s work difficult, though, just because it can feel so all-over-the-place at times, which isn't always endearing! Where 'difficult' Rivette meets 'great' Rivette, though, I think, is L'Amour Fou – a film that viewers not already acquainted with his style will, I expect, find very challenging, but a work that nonetheless ultimately feels satisfying and coherent (to me, at least, anyway). That's a DVD release that's well overdue.
Back to Rivette, I wouldn't necessarily say that all of his films are 'difficult' – apart from the slightly forbidding running times, anyone can get into, for instance, Celine and Julie Go Boating or La Belle Noiseuse, and even Out 1 is perfectly accessible if you stick with it; the same goes for most of his '80s films. I do find his late '70s work difficult, though, just because it can feel so all-over-the-place at times, which isn't always endearing! Where 'difficult' Rivette meets 'great' Rivette, though, I think, is L'Amour Fou – a film that viewers not already acquainted with his style will, I expect, find very challenging, but a work that nonetheless ultimately feels satisfying and coherent (to me, at least, anyway). That's a DVD release that's well overdue.
- knives
- Joined: Sat Sep 06, 2008 10:49 pm
Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
Moses and Aaron is also great. I don't know what titles you are referring to, but it sounds like you've seen Straub's recent films after her death which are fairly different from the earlier films.
- dda1996a
- Joined: Tue Oct 27, 2015 10:14 am
Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
For the film specifically relating to my criticism was Jackals and Arabs, but I also glimpsed at Othon and another, newer short and they seemed mostly the same. Now I get from those few minutes of Othon was their aim is, but I'm not sure how much patience I'll have to watch a bunch of actors delivering lines to the camera, no matter if their lines and dress are purposely at odds with their environment.
I mean I'm going to try it as I said, and maybe the film will have more. But based on that short and those glimpses that was the impression I got, hence my question
I mean I'm going to try it as I said, and maybe the film will have more. But based on that short and those glimpses that was the impression I got, hence my question
- knives
- Joined: Sat Sep 06, 2008 10:49 pm
Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
In that case you definitely haven't seen much variation of their work (and for the most part only Straub's contributions). En rachâchant is a good short to look out for if you want some differentiation.
- Luke M
- Joined: Fri Jul 13, 2007 1:21 am
Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
My personal journey through films has been akin to something like this. Less like a video game and more like learning courses, eg algebra I-III. I think there is a desire to sort of stand up on a hill and say, “Kurosawa? Noob” but honestly I’ve never seen that on this board. I could be missing it.Satori wrote:I think it is important that this not be misunderstood as a kind of elitism, either, as through only a "select few" are worthy of Rivette. That is nonsense. Another thing the discourse of difficulty does is to make cinephilia into a kind of video game: level 1 is contemporary Hollywood, level 2 is Kubrick and Scorsese, level 3 is Truffaut and Kurosawa, and then eventually you can "beat" enough of the levels to reach the heights of Rivette, Akerman, and Straub/Huillet. The result is that people want to prove their high level by making sure they like all the appropriate filmmakers. Worse, people who don't like Rivette get defensive, as if they think their cinephilia is being called into question. This is all absurd, of course, but I sense this subtext in conversations about difficulty.Drucker wrote: There is a mindset to get in when watching a Rivette film, and that's what makes them "difficult", not the length.
The other thing I wanted to comment, I watched this disc the other night. It was my first time seeing the film. I enjoyed it and the more I think about it the more I think fondly of it. I have a question though, there are a few scenes where there’s a quick fade to black and then a quick return to normal. Is this part of the film or something on the disc?
- Michael Kerpan
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Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
Part of the film, not a disc defect...
- Luke M
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Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
Did I completely miss something by thinking this might’ve been an error?Michael Kerpan wrote:Part of the film, not a disc defect...
- Michael Kerpan
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Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
I never really tried very hard to assign any significance to things like this in Rivette's films. 
- All the Best People
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Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
Rivette frequently uses the quick cut to black both as transitions between scenes and, as memory serves, even within scenes. When I first watched The Nun a couple weeks back, I was very relieved at the first example of this; it really is a Rivette film!
I think he sometimes does it to break up two different takes of the same shot, and sometimes he just does it as a brief ellipsis.
I think he sometimes does it to break up two different takes of the same shot, and sometimes he just does it as a brief ellipsis.
- spectre
- Joined: Thu Dec 29, 2011 8:52 am
Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
Most importantly, I think, it gives the film rhythm – kind of like punctuation in text. This technique is also present in early Wenders, Akerman and Jarmusch; perhaps not coincidentally, I love all of those films!
- Michael Kerpan
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Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
New Blu-Ray of C&J arrived today (just before tomorrow's blizzard). Only managed to watch half of this tonight, but can confirm that this looks pretty lovely.
- Adam X
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Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
Meaning it doesn’t look like the DVD Beaver screen caps, then? I’d be happy if that were true.
I thought their caps for both Céline and Julie & the Agnès Varda set looked awfully contrasty, with off colour timing (on my admittedly non-calibrated laptop)...
I thought their caps for both Céline and Julie & the Agnès Varda set looked awfully contrasty, with off colour timing (on my admittedly non-calibrated laptop)...
- Michael Kerpan
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Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
Looks better (a lot) on our TV than the Beaver screen shots do on my monitor. Offhand, I have no problem with the color overall. Definitely very grainy (if you sit close to the screen).
I think the French DVD set still beats this for extras (if only this set had been subbed).
- Adam X
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Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
That’s the perennial problem with French releases, hey? Thanks Michael.
After watching Paris Belongs To Us recently, I think I’m slowly warming to Rivette, but I’ve always liked C&J, it’ll be good to finally see it again.
After watching Paris Belongs To Us recently, I think I’m slowly warming to Rivette, but I’ve always liked C&J, it’ll be good to finally see it again.
- Michael Kerpan
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Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
With Rivette, go with the flow. Do not search for "meaning". If one can manage this, one will (probably) enjoy most of his films. 
- Adam X
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Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
I’m entirely fine with not searching for “meaning”, for me it’s the endurance. I don’t think it’s anything to do with pace, either - I could happily watch a five hour Hou Hsiao-Hsien film; his films, for me, just seem to really drag, regardless of length. Not sure I’m ready to make another attempt at Out 1 quite yet, though. 
- All the Best People
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Re: Céline and Julie Go Boating & Paris Nous Appartient
Honestly, just fast-forward though that 45-minute scene in the first episode of Out 1. It really picks up once that's survived.Adam Grikepelis wrote:I’m entirely fine with not searching for “meaning”, for me it’s the endurance. I don’t think it’s anything to do with pace, either - I could happily watch a five hour Hou Hsiao-Hsien film; his films, for me, just seem to really drag, regardless of length. Not sure I’m ready to make another attempt at Out 1 quite yet, though.