Bruno Putzulu, Cécile Camp, Jean Davy
, Jérémie Lippmann
Cinematic iconoclast Jean-Luc Godard returns
to the front ranks of contemporary filmmaking while embracing the
digital video revolution (no great surprise, given his eager and
early embrace of video technology in the 1970s) with this drama.
In the first part of the film, shot on 35 mm black-and-white film,
a filmmaker named Edgar (Bruno Putzulu) is in the midst of a casting
session with his producers, looking for the leading lady for his
next film. More interested in discussing philosophy than in the
nuts and bolts of the character, Edgar speaks with a number of actresses
before he encounters Elle (Cecile Camp); he's fascinated by her,
and is certain he's met her somewhere before, but can't tell where
or when. Eventually, Edgar decides Elle is the right person for
the role, but he then discovers she has died. In the second part
of the film, produced using color digital video equipment, Edgar
flashes back to the moment when he first met Elle -- he's meeting
with an elderly couple who survived the Holocaust and have sold
their life story to a Hollywood movie producer. While meeting the
couple as a guest of an old friend and historian (Jean Lacouture)
interested in their story, he's introduced to the couple's granddaughter,
a law student who has offered to take a look at their contract --
Elle. |