Red Screamer wrote: Fri Dec 02, 2022 2:09 pm
Lots of questionable assertions in this thread, but calling
Jeanne Dielman theoretical is pretty misleading. It’s a simple, concrete movie—extremely concrete, in fact. If this was the first movie someone ever watched, I don’t think it would bewilder them the same way that
Weekend or
Mirror might. A detailed portrait of a particular person in a particular situation for a few days seems like a perfectly reasonable thing for a movie to be about. The challenge of
Jeanne Dielman in the medium’s history is not a question of theory, but instead is about Akerman’s film drawing more from painting, dance, and real life(!) than the conventional fiction feature film, which tends to have its roots in theater and the novel/short story.
@heartthesilence The comparison to
Ulysses is a good point and
Ulysses is absolutely a more extreme version of what people are claiming about the academic and aggressive leanings of
Jeanne Dielman. Actually a good description of the action of
Jeanne Dielman could be “all of the everyday activities Joyce didn’t think to include in
Ulysses”. No one cooks, cleans, does the dishes, makes the house, etc. in Joyce’s novel as far as I can remember.
I don't know if any of the assertions I've made are among those you find questionable, but I actually agree with most of what you've said here. My mixed feelings about
Jeanne Dielman topping the list don't come from thinking it's too theoretical or challenging to be called the greatest film ever made, but rather from my acknowledgment that that's how the vast majority of newcomers to the film will view it, which I worry may end up hurting its reputation somewhat in the long run. It's a film that has very special meaning for me, so while part of me is thrilled to see Chantal Akerman getting this level of acclaim, I'm also just glad I'm not on social media to see the reactions of people who will be watching it for the first time because of its placement on this list. As I said in an earlier comment, any film being proclaimed "The Greatest Movie Ever Made" automatically puts a target on its back, and just to put it in perspective, there were a lot of people who were baffled for decades as to how anyone could possibly enjoy
Citizen Kane, so I can't even imagine what they're going to think of
Jeanne Dielman. This is a film that is decidedly a Capital-A Art film, the sort of thing I suspect most "normal" (i.e. non-cinephile) people will have a viscerally negative reaction to it should they decide to check it out.
I'm definitely not saying that makes it any less of a masterpiece (which I do think it is), but it's clearly the least accessible film by a wide margin that's ever topped the Sight & Sound poll, and the spotlight this puts on it will likely lead to it developing another reputation altogether with probably a majority of people who discuss movies online. I'm already anticipating a "how long can you last trying to get through
Jeanne Dielman?" TikTok challenge and countless reductive parodies of people filming themselves cleaning dishes in silence with sarcastic "the greatest film ever made according to Sight & Sound" descriptions. Not that any of that should deter us from celebrating it, but I also just have to accept now that there's a distinct possibility that bringing up
Jeanne Dielman may result in a lot of eye-rolling and guffawing from now on, as it's probably going to become the go-to punchline for "pretentious arthouse film" jokes from now on. The bottom line is that, regardless of its merits, it is objectively not a film that the vast, vast majority of people will even be able to get through, let alone enjoy. My own feelings about the film don't blind me from the fact that, outside of the ultra-cinephilic bubble that we occupy here and viewed in the larger context of all general audiences, its appeal is
extremely niche, and to virtually everyone just now hearing of it thanks to the attention placed on it by this poll, it being called the best film ever made is going to register as baffling at best, if not aggressively contemptuous of the "average" moviegoer. It's a double-edged sword in that I actually think it does deserve this level of attention *within the cinephile community* (key context), but since this list is reaching far beyond those horizons, sending it out to the rest of the world is just asking for it to become the target of mean-spirited and reductive memes.
To your point about how it wouldn't be at all bewildering to someone whose first movie ever was
Jeanne Dielman, I agree with that assessment completely, but that's kind of the issue because if anything, it actually requires a lot of un-learning of cinematic conventions in order to appreciate. Perhaps that's what others here meant by it being theoretical, because it does demand to a degree that the viewer reconsiders their concept of what a film is. That may be less of a challenge to those who have already seen the works of Ozu (Akerman's primary influence on this film) or any of the subsequent adherents to slow cinema, but it's a big ask for most people. It's not that it's challenging in and of itself, but it most certainly is in the context of what the general population has come to expect from a movie. It completely upends conventions and expectations, which is likely a big part of why it's so acclaimed, but it's also why most "average" movie watchers will absolutely despise it. They'll react the same way as they would if a list of greatest painters were topped by, say, Jackson Pollock -- not that I'd compare his aesthetic whatsoever to Akerman's, but since it exists so far beyond their concept of what art is, they tend to viscerally respond by dismissing the notion that it is art at all.