Showing posts with label chris marker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chris marker. Show all posts

December 29, 2007

La Jetée (1962)

5/5

I take back what I said about The Hire: Powder Keg. At 28 minutes, La Jetée is my favorite short film of all time. The images are indelible, the experience unforgettable. Like Sans Soleil, it is a meditation on time and memory, but a much more poignant and effective one. The plot follows a prisoner in the aftermath of WWIII who is used for time travel experiments. Edited together using still images from the footage, Marker uses motion itself as a representation of time. There is one break from the exclusive use of stills, and the instant we see time start to flow, it is ripped away from us. We are left with the question, is it only a dream?

The black and white cinematography is simultaneously beautiful and tragic thanks to masterful compositions. The story is made more powerful through an expert choice of music. There was very little acting to speak of in the traditional sense, but the timing in the editing and the shot choices managed to be just as evocative as any acting could be. There was only one real problem I had with the movie, and that was the people of the future. They looked preposterous; why not just make them look like us? They are, thankfully, in the movie for a very brief period of time and do not distract too heavily from the beauty in the rest of the film. This is a movie you will remember for many years to come.

IMDb link: http://imdb.com/title/tt0056119/

Sans Soleil (1983)

3/5

Chris Marker's Sans Soleil, Sunless in English, is a unique fusion of doc, travelogue, and philosophy journal. The best I can do to describe it is call it a meditation on time and memory. The writing was sometimes poetic and thought-provoking, but mostly obfuscatory. What made it more difficult to follow was the lack of a central plot or story. Which made the pacing terrible. The editing overall was relatively poor. However, the cinematography was absolutely breathtaking. There is a scene involving the shooting of a giraffe that was truly captivating. Overall, it's hard to recommend to anyone except for those searching for an alternative, nontraditional outlook or world view.

IMDb link: http://imdb.com/title/tt0084628/