Juliet Berto, Jean-Pierre Léaud ,
Anne Wiazemsky , Blandine Jeanson
Director Jean-Luc Godard, whose advocacy
of Maoism bordered on intoxication, infuriated many traditionalist
critics with his swiftly paced satire La Chinoise. Godard's then-wife
Anne Wiazemsky plays a philosophy student who commiserates with
the four members of her campus Maoist group. They are so taken by
the external trappings of their cause--the posters, the Little Red
Books, the by-rote chantings--that they seem not to grasp the true
meaning of their political persuasion. Nor do they give any thought
to the long-range ramifications of their terrorist activities. Godard
is obviously on the students' side throughout, though he balances
their fanaticism with the comparative gentility of old-style revolutionaries.
Nonfans of Godard were given migraines by the director's perverse
refusal to film even the simplest sequence in a linear, logical
fashion. La Chinoise quickly gained the reputation of a "head
film", best appreciated when the viewer is stoned. In these
PC days, the audience for this sort of film is generally "straight"...which
may be why it has seldom been shown in recent years. |