Jean-Luc Godard – a portrait

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    Jean-Luc Godard a portrait

    http://podacademy.org/podcasts/jean-luc-godard-a-portrait/

    Posted on: November 4, 2012

    This is the third of our Huston Film Lectures, a series of lectures given to students at the

    National University of IrelandsHuston School of Film and Digital Mediain Galway. The lecture

    series features leading film directors, writers, producers, cinematographers and academics.

    This lecture is given byColin MacCabe, a British writer, film producer and University professor.

    In his lecture, MacCabe provides an insightful portrait of an almost mythical figure of cinema,

    Jean-Luc Godard.

    Colin MacCable: To rehearse what presumably is very familiar to you, theCahiers duCinmacame up with their theory of the author in the mid fifties and they came up with it, as

    Godard says, so that we could say that Hitchcock or Ford were as great an artist as Aragon or

    Picasso. And the theory of the author that the Cahiers critics developed was a theory of the

    author, above all, at the service of a theory of the cinema which was against writing. Classic

    French cinema traditionally took a great literary text, adapted it, and the director and indeed

    the writer of the screenplay were held to be at the service of this literary masterpiece.

    Truffaut, Godard and the others wanted nothing to do with that. They were not interested in

    the writer, they were interested in the director, they were not particularly interested in the

    script, they were interested in the lighting, in the shot sequence, the performances, they were

    interested the themes that repeated across films. There are two things that you can say about

    it: the first thing is that the Cahiers du Cinma is the first theory of the author, or at the least

    the first theory of the author, that I am ware of, to be produced from the position of the

    audience. It is not a theory produced from the side of the author, the side of the subject, its a

    theory of the author produced from the side of the audience. And the second thing to say

    about it, it is that was above all a way of categorising the cinema, it was above all a way of

    taking a huge archive of a particularly commercial American cinema and saying here there are

    certain ways in which you can divide up the archive. Here there are certain ways in which you

    can decide what it is that it is worth seeing. That actually the concept of the author is a way of

    dividing up, of regulating this history and producing a canon which actually we are now deeplyfamiliar with, because its a canon we all learn from, but a canon which was not, in those initial

    years, available.

    So as a theory of the author it has the interesting features that it is from the side of the

    audience and it is related to the archive or the corpus. In that sense is very very different from

    traditional, romantic theories of the author, though it does have most of most traditional,

    romantic theories in with it. If one is coming to the cinema from outside, if you are coming to a

    film set on which large numbers of people mill around, expensive equipment is moved about

    and those delicate things called actors place themselves in front of the camera, you become

    fairly quickly aware of the fact that if there is not someone orchestrating this huge assemblethe whole thing is likely to fall apart. So, in other words, if you look at a film set it seems quite

    http://podacademy.org/podcasts/jean-luc-godard-a-portrait/http://podacademy.org/podcasts/jean-luc-godard-a-portrait/http://www.filmschool.ie/http://www.filmschool.ie/http://www.filmschool.ie/http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0531404/http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0531404/http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0531404/http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/oct/18/story-cahiers-cinema-emilie-bickerton-reviewhttp://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/oct/18/story-cahiers-cinema-emilie-bickerton-reviewhttp://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/oct/18/story-cahiers-cinema-emilie-bickerton-reviewhttp://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/oct/18/story-cahiers-cinema-emilie-bickerton-reviewhttp://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/oct/18/story-cahiers-cinema-emilie-bickerton-reviewhttp://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/oct/18/story-cahiers-cinema-emilie-bickerton-reviewhttp://www.imdb.com/name/nm0531404/http://www.filmschool.ie/http://podacademy.org/podcasts/jean-luc-godard-a-portrait/
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    clear that there has to be someone in charge of it, and it is also quite clear that someone is

    most evidently be the director. Now I should just as a parenthesis say that actually I have a

    great number of doubts about the auteur theory in its pure form. If we just take the

    filmmakers whom the Cahiers were most interested in, that is, Hitchcock and Hawks, they

    were interested in them as great directors who didnt write. But actually film history of the last

    thirty years has rather altered the picture of those directors. It is true, as form as we know,

    that Hitchcock never put pen to paper; on the other hand, if you read the accounts of how

    Hitchcock would get some original material, get the writer and decamp to a hotel room in

    which he would sit with the writer until the script was finished, it is not at all clear that

    Hitchcock did not at some level write his own scripts. And if we look at Hawks, with a very

    different method of work, but if we look at the time he spends improvising with his actors and

    the way that that improvisation gets turned into the scenes that we watch, again, the notion

    that Hawks isnt originating the scripts is extremely doubtful. So this is not the topic of my

    lecture but it seems to me than when one is talking about the author in cinema that the role of

    the writer is absolutely not to be underestimated. Actually, as a matter of fact, all of thedirectors who came out of the Cahiers du Cinmawriting in the fifties we all know their

    names (Rohmer, Rivette, Chabrol Godard, Truffaut), with the exception I think of Chabrol and

    even I am not sure hes an exception they all wrote as well as directed. So although,

    theoretically, they had been in favour of the director against the writer and although they had

    been absolutely determined to stress features of the cinema which were not to do with the

    writing, it is nonetheless of some importance that they actually all wrote their own scripts. But

    that is, as I say, is an aside.

    If we are now faced with a series of arguments against the author, a series of arguments above

    all against a notion of the unified and controlling author, the author perhaps above all ofromantic theory, the author as the individual set aside from society who finds in nature and art

    a truth which she communicates and a truth to which she has privileged access to. If we want

    to avoid the problems of that view of the author we are nonetheless faced with the same

    arguments which makes it difficult, particularly in the cinema, to get round the author.

    Arguments both practical, as well as theoretical. And those are in some sense the difficulties

    that I found myself confronting when I decided to write the biography of Godard. And it

    seemed to me that the way to avoid the problem of unified author was indeed to take my

    lessons from the modernists texts which in fact had inspired both Barthes and Foucault.

    Because the whole of the Parisian theory of the sixties is in fact the kind of repetitional rerun

    of the modernists experiments in art, literature and thinking of the twenties and thirties. And I

    took as my model that well-known Irish writer James Joyce. And, as you know, Joyce, wellit

    can be argued that Joyce did nothing but write autobiographies. But leaving that more general

    question aside, we know that Joyce had two very different stabs at writing an autobiographical

    novel. The first, of which apparently there was over a thousand pages of manuscript, he throw

    in the fire and small fragments of it were retained and published after his death as Stephen

    Hero. A second version, with which we are I assume, particularly in this room, all familiar, A

    portrait of the artist as a young man, which was published in 1916. In the first book, Stephen

    Hero, Joyce tries to write a continuous narrative account of the birth of the artistic

    consciousness. We dont have the beginning and we dont have the end, but we have a middle

    section which shows us a student at the University, fifty times cleverer than all his

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    contemporaries, fifty times more artistically endowed and, it has to be said, a tremendous

    prig. And its interesting that priggishness is entirely built into the structure of Stephen Hero,

    which is exactly written within a continuous progression towards ever greater knowledge, and

    which, that ever greater knowledge is always already at the authors hand in order for him to

    pour scorn and derision on the stupidity of his student fellows and their pathetic aspirations,

    both religious and political.

    One can see in that Stephen Hero exactly the attempt to produce an account of the birth of

    the romantic author. That is to say, a birth of exactly this controlling and omniscient

    consciousness exactly in control of his world. What does Joyce do, when he throws this away

    as worthless and starts again? He completely gives up that continuous narrative thread. The

    book that he did publish, A portrait of the artist as a young man, comes in five sections, each

    section is written in a subtly different register and voice, suitable to the particular stage of

    which the extract is a representation. There is no attempt to link together these five episodes,

    to give a coherent account of consciousness. So that, for example, at the end of the very

    famous third section, when having been promised all the fires of hell, he turns to confession

    and communion with the Church, the break then to the next section, in which hes lapsed

    again, is not greatly explained. And then it is explained even less it is the break between the

    end of that fourth section, when he sees the vision of the young woman in the beach, the

    vision of the artistic triumph, and then another erupt break and we find ourselves in the

    kitchen of the impoverished Dedaluses having breakfast before he sets off for his lecture and

    again no attempt is made to produce an overarching account of how one moment relates to

    another. In other words, Joyce uses a montage as his crucial tool in providing what, according

    to the purposes of this lecture, rather than A portrait of the artist as a young man, we should

    call Snap shots of the artist as a young man.

    So what it was important to do, was to try and find a set of angles on Godard which would

    provide a way in talking about some of the important elements of the experience of the

    director, without at any point attempting to produce an overall coherent view, without at any

    point attempting to produce an understanding of subjectivity. And if there was a rule I had

    pasted to my word-processor as I wrote it, it was that I must never use any sentence of the

    form of the sentence: he must have thought, he must have felt. Not simply because of how

    on earth could I know how he must have thought or he must have felt, but because the lie of

    that particular formulation goes much deeper, how does anyone whos living a life know what

    they think and feel as they live it? And I tell you, its much more difficult to avoid sentences ofthat structure than you may think, even with that injunction as it were to myself that was

    constantly there, I must have produced, if not every day certainly every other day, a sentence

    of that type and had to go back and start again.

    Why the author at all? Well, the author at all because I think that Cahiers are right. And I think

    that Cahiers are right not only in the realm of cinema but in the realm of literature, that you

    find certain kinds of repetition, certain kinds of emphasis, which you dont have to explain by a

    all-knowing, all-unified, regular consciousness but which you probably do have to explain by

    the specific way in which an individual body traverses a whole set of institutions and histories

    and which, in some very deep sense, makes us all really individual. And that individuality is notthe individuality of the romantics, its not a unified individuality, its an individuality which

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    perhaps might be even better written in true Joycean style in -dividual in which the emphasis

    is much on the dividualnature of the body that traverses these histories and institutions as on

    its unity.

    So I chose a series of such traverses. The first was the family. And one of the interesting things

    about Godard is that he is a French protestant. And something I didnt know before Iembarked on the book, he is not simply a French protestant but, through his mothers side,

    hes a member of one of the most famous French protestant family of France,

    theMonods,who include Nobel prize winners, Jacques Chiracs right-hand man in the last

    presidential campaign and, above all, hosts and hosts of protestant clergymen. And the other

    thing, perhaps even more interesting that I discovered, is that Godard has spent almost his

    entirely life travelling between two towns. Between, on the one hand, Paris, the great

    metropolitan city of Europe, the city which from the seventeenth century until the 1960s was

    the intellectual capital not just of Europe but of the world. And, on the other hand, a small

    Swiss town called Nyon, in the canton of Vaud, on the banks of Lake Geneva, some thirty miles

    from Geneva. And his life has been a back-and-forth between these two places. What was

    interesting was that I discovered that his familys life had been a back-and-forth between

    these two places. If you could go back two, three, four generations and discover this passage

    between these two countries, two cultures, and a passage between being, coming from

    Geneva, the protestant capital of Europe, between a setting where his religion was the norm

    and a setting within France where protestantism is a tiny percentage of the population, no

    more than 2%, which have known a tremendous history of suffering and prosecution

    throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth century. And one finds in this protestantism at

    least two things which, without in any way wanting to read directly from religious structures to

    practice of an individual, they seem to me suggestive, if not illuminating. The first thing, ofcourse, that this protestantism has is the the tremendous notion of justification by faith and,

    above all, at its centre, the notion of the elect, those who, whatever their actions, are saved.

    And I think if you look at Godards work, both his films and his writings, you can see that this

    tremendous sense of the importance of faith, a faith for Godard its above all a faith in the

    cinema, a faith that one must preserve against all misadventures and doubts, is, I think, in

    quite a strong sense, a protestant faith.

    And something else, which I found very interesting and suggestive, is that French protestants

    talk of the seventeenth century as their time of the desert. A time when not only they were

    forbidden to practise their own faith, but were forced to follow publicly the Catholic faith. Andin which all performances of protestant services had to be performed within the family home.

    And I discovered that this practice had continued in Godards own family, where very often on

    a Sunday they would not go to church but would have the protestant services at home. And it

    strikes me again as illuminating and suggestive of Godard that the way in which, I wouldnt say

    without any precedent in the history of the cinema, but without much precedent in the history

    of the cinema, that Godard as it were practises his faith at home could in some ways be seen in

    relation to this religious tradition. And it must be said that one of the moments that I find most

    striking was when his brother told me about the long tradition of protestant pastors within the

    family and then said of course, Jean-Luc himself is a protestant pastor, an image I havent

    since been able to get out of my mind.

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    Godard comes from this dual situation, but this dual situation was interrupted and interrupted

    very very severely by two things: it was interrupted by the war and it was interrupted by the

    breakdown of his parents marriage. In 1945, having been in Switzerland for three years

    continuously, he came to Paris to continue his studies at the lyce and he came to a situation

    in which I dont think theres ever been anywhere more intense reflection on the cinema.

    Paris had been the capital of cinema since the Lumire brothers and it had also been, from

    throughout the twenties and thirties, the capital of the reflection on the cinema. It was not just

    that cinema was made, it was that people thought about cinema. And it is in Paris where you

    find the first beginnings of those people who were saying here its a new great democratic

    art, heres an art which transforms everything since the Renaissance, here is an art which

    challenges the basis of the ways in which we thought about art. At that point, sound arrived.

    One of the great great attractions of cinema for intellectuals was that it was an universal art.

    And that was a particular attraction in the years after the First Wold War. Here was an art that

    would transcend national languages, that would transcend nationalities, here was theuniversal art. Bang! Along comes sound and two things happen when you get sound. First of

    all, immediately you get national cinemas in a way you didnt have beforehand. Of course you

    had national cinemas before sound but you are really doing national cinemas now. And

    secondly, the budgets go through the roof because actually the cost of shooting the sound

    affectively consolidates Hollywood stories. And intellectuals drop cinema; there was always a

    relatively small number of people who have been interested in cinema and most of them

    dropped with the advent of sound. There is one exception, there is a man called Roger

    Lienhard, who writes for a Catholic magazine called Espritin the thirties, and he says no, the

    project of cinema is above all a realist project, the advent of sound means the cinema can be

    more realistic. I want to welcome the advent of sound. Furthermore, Im going to write a

    handbook for the spectator, so that the spectator, the person who is looking at the cinema,

    can begin to understand how the film is put together and understand it better. If you

    understand that at that moment the whole of the Cahiers project began, then you are

    completely correct to understand it, because that is it exactly.

    Its most attentive reader is man called Andr Bazin. He develops the notion of educating the

    public and combines it with the publication ofCahiers du Cinma. A publication which is very

    deliberately broken away both from the University but also from the Communist Party. Its

    broken away from the University for fairly obvious reasons. And its broken away from the

    Communist Party because, of course, in post-war France, and in exactly the position where

    Godard is as a young man, the Cold War has broken out. And if the Cold War has broken out

    and youre on the Russian side, then youre meant to loathe Hollywood and that means to

    praise the glories of communist Stalin. So if you are interested in the cinema, that particular

    Cold War opposition is untenable. And Bazin, very gentle and very wonderful man, finally has

    enough, and he writes an hilarious article called The myth of Stalin, in which he goes through

    contemporary Soviet films and shows how the new Soviet films are not like the old Soviet films

    trying to show historical elements at work but everything is at the service of one all-knowing

    hero called Stalin. And, as he says it is true of course that Hollywood has heroes like this but

    Tarzan at least has the justification that the audience want to go and see it, whereas Stalindoesnt even have that.

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    So Bazin has split himself from both the traditional intellectuals and the traditional left. He sets

    up a magazine in which all these young people, Godard included, write and develop their

    theories. But write and develop their theories, at the end of a project the project is to

    improve public taste, so to improve cinema, so to enable them to make the films for an

    improved cinema. And remarkably, because you may think that sounds a bit stupid, thats

    what they did. Now exactly how they did its very complicated and now I want to speed it up a

    bit. But very crudely put, they did it for two reasons. The first reason was a new generation of

    technology: they got a new generation of cameras and sound recorders, which meant they

    were able to shoot on the street, which meant they were able to capture Paris on the run and

    at a very low cost, in a way that nobody had before. And secondly, the state institution which

    looked after, was in charge of the cinema was desperate to find some new life. So funnily

    enough, although you might have an image of them struggling against the establishment

    they were certainly struggling against the establishment of directors, producers, etc but the

    bureaucrats behind those directors and producers were actually looking for a new generation

    of film-makers. And thus to find them, breaking through these institutions, and in anextraordinary moment, we find Truffaut, who has been specifically and by name banned from

    the Cannes film festival, I think its 1957 In 1958 he wins the best prize as director for Les

    Quatre Cents Coups, Chabrol makes his films, Godard makes Bout de Souffle. And

    suddenly they are the New Wave and the New Wave literally goes around the world with

    imitators in Italy, Brazil, you name it, the New Wave is there.

    So, family, intellectual context, institution: those are the three ways of looking at it. But finally,

    politics. Godard, you might think, would be blissfully happy with the cinema. But any of you

    who, for example, have seen Le Mpris people have seen Le Mpris? would know that

    he isnt very happy with the cinema. And he isnt very happy with the cinema for a wholeseries of reasons. From the most personal, where one of the things all these young delinquent

    boys had dreamt about, was becoming directors so that theyd have their stars their

    Marlene Dietrichs, their Rita Hayworths. And Godard had indeed found a star, hed found

    Anna Karina and hed married her. But the marriage was breaking up, in very much the terms

    that the marriage in Le Mpris breaks up. But also, there was a historical paradox that their

    praise of Hollywood came exactly at the moment that the Hollywood they were praising was

    dying. The late fifties having the impact of the divestment of their exhibition chains and the

    impact of television means that Hollywood goes through a catastrophic period. And all their

    favourite directors, the Nicholas Rays and the Sam Fullers, could not find work. Theres a

    tremendous lack of a failure of faith in whats happened them. And also, theres the VietnamWar. There is America, which had been the liberation of Europe in 1944-1945, is now suddenly

    the clear oppressor. And Godards work reflects this in the mid sixties. And it ends with him

    quitting the cinema completely. He leaves the institutions of cinema, despite the fact that he is

    one of the best known names in the cinema, in fact he gives up his name completely. He stops

    making films as Godard, he starts making films as the Dziga Vertov Group. The name Dziga

    Vertov being chosen both for the innovation of documentary style, but also as against

    Eisenstein, against the representative of Soviet orthodoxy.

    That experiment that Godard undertakes is really unthinkable without understanding the

    moment of 1968. At one level, an unimportant hiccup in the development of the consumer

    state, a month when a student riot and a general strike have General de Gaulle helicoptering

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    out of Paris to the armies on the Rhine to make sure theyd be loyal in face of the impending

    revolution. Back home a young Jacques Chirac puts a pistol in his pocket as he sets up to

    negotiate with the unions and successfully buys them off. In effect, May is over by May 31st.

    But at one level of society theres a huge number of young people that believe that a new

    dawn is at hand, new ways of working must be invented. And Godard, much older, is amongst

    them as he sets out on a series of political experiments which, although of continuing interest,

    are films which are completely unwatchable. Just to give you again the merest fragment of the

    moment, they set out to Czechoslovakia to film whats happen in Czechoslovakia but the

    whole film is devoted to showing that you cant go and film somewhere and find out whats

    happening. Thus, for example, theres a moment with two workers in a factory and theyre

    talking in Czech to each other; you expect the translation to come up in the soundtrack but

    instead what comes is the junction if you dont know Czech, youd better learn it fast.

    So a huge kind of way of showing you how difficult or at least the presuppositions within

    traditional documentary but the context for those experiments was an active revolutionary

    movement which had simply disappeared by the time that they returned to the cinema and

    made a film called Tout Va Bien, which effectively presents a picture of France four years

    after 68 and shows the various impasses in which everybody is stuck.

    And Godard then not only leaves the cinema, he leaves Paris. He first moved to Grenoble and

    then to a very very small village called Rolle. And he has, for the last thirty years, made his

    films from there, on his own terms, with his own equipment and he claims to be (and I think he

    probable is) the only film-maker who can shoot film 365 days a year without asking anybodys

    by-your-leave. His name is enough to bring in sufficient commissions and he continues a

    remarkably productive life. And includes, what I think its a new form, and which I cant

    imagineand here is where Ill end I cant imagine any rivals in the immediate future.

    Because Godard is all in the Cinmathque, in Langlois Cinmathque if Bazin is one of his

    godfathers, the other is Langlois. Langlois in the Cinmathque in Paris showing the whole

    Hawkss work as it were, both silent and talkie, both Western and comedy, the entire range of

    Hawkss work is for the first time watchable in Paris immediately after the war. And Godard in

    1978 goes to Montreal after Langloiss death and gives a series of lectures on the history of the

    cinema in which he says every other page the real trouble is, I dont have the technological

    means to talk to you about the cinema because I need the cinema to talk about the cinema.

    And, of course, the developments of video enable him to do just that.

    So what he does, from 1988 to 1998, is make an extraordinary series of films or videos, I dont

    know which one you want to call them, that are called Histories of Cinema. They are a

    history of the cinema, but they are also a history of the twentieth century and they are also an

    autobiography. And these three things are mixed together in a way which I can only evoke, I

    certainly cant describe, with a richness of image and sound for which I know no parallel. The

    reason well never see it again or at least well never see anything like it in the near future, is

    that Godard takes from the whole history of cinema and what he wants to be seen, he just

    puts it on. First of all, you need the material conditions where you can put your hand on any

    film that you want, difficult enough. But secondly and much more importantly, you need the

    resources to clear the copyright on those films. Something which, of course, Godard didnt

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    bother to do but Gaumont, his great patron, did bother to do for him. And as I say I doubt

    whether one will ever, or not in the near future, see such a work again.

    And if also offered an end to my book, because of course one of the ways that Joyce manages

    to avoid an unified subjectivity is that he starts his book in the third person but ends it in the

    first person with a set of diary entries by Stephen Dedalus. So I was able to end the book in thefirst person because Godard himself ends the Histoire(s) du cinma with a long personal

    passage about, no matter how terrible the world hes lived in, and the cinema hes lived in,

    how much he appreciates the fact that hes been allowed to film. And he ends with this

    quotation, which is a quotation from Borges, which is a quotation from Coleridge and, Godard

    knew that, but what I found out is that even Coleridges is a quotation from the young thinker

    John Paul. And he ends with this thought:

    If a man travelled across paradise in a dream and received a flower as proof of his passage

    and on awakening he found that flower in his hands, whats to be said? I was that man.

    Notes

    Colin MacCabes biography of Godard was first published in 2003 under the title Godard: A

    Portrait of the Artist at Seventy.

    http://us.macmillan.com/godard/ColinMacCabehttp://us.macmillan.com/godard/ColinMacCabehttp://us.macmillan.com/godard/ColinMacCabehttp://us.macmillan.com/godard/ColinMacCabehttp://us.macmillan.com/godard/ColinMacCabe