Sunday, October 13, 2019
Truffautââ¬â¢s Jules et Jim â⬠An Expressionistic Analysis :: Movie Film Essays
Truffautââ¬â¢s Jules et Jim ââ¬â An Expressionistic Analysis As far as Bazinââ¬â¢s essay ââ¬Å"The Evolution of the Language of Cinemaâ⬠might be used as a formal test of categorisationââ¬ânotwithstanding the problematics inherent in his oversimplification of the realist and expressionist methodologyââ¬âinitial viewing of Jules et Jim seems to present a dichotomous structure. Certainly, a number of Bazinââ¬â¢s criteria for realism are met: camera movement; long-takes; composition-in-depth. and deep focus; a certain ambiguity of meaning. Similarly, several of Bazinââ¬â¢s criteria for expressionism also can be found: there is spatial and temporal discontinuity; editing is used for artistic effect; reality is augmented to create a world only vaguely like our own, and so on. The dichotomy though is only apparent. The over-all effect created by Truffaut shows Jules et Jim belonging more comfortably in the expressionistic domain; and, as we shall discover, devices which would normallyââ¬âat least according to Bazinââ¬â deliver the effect of realism are utilised by Truffaut as tools of expressionism. In our analysis of Jules et Jim, rather than examine fleetingly the whole gamut of expressionistic techniques, we shall instead explore in some detail the more important methods, paying particular attention to temporal and spatial distortions, editing and montage, special visual effects, and finally discover the manner in which Bazinââ¬â¢s archetypal techniques of realismââ¬âlong-takes and composition-in-depth.ââ¬âare recast. Certainly one of the most striking features of Jules et Jim is temporal distortion. Truffaut utilises this effect by various means and for various purposes. In the first two minutes of the film, time is condensed in two ways: by the third person narrative, which encapsulates the filmââ¬â¢s exposition in the most laconic of terms, describing the meeting and developing friendship of Jules and Jim, and also by the selective images which largely avoid redunant description of the aural narrative, but instead seek to interpret and compliment. Accordingly, when the narrator tells us that Jules is a foreigner in Paris; that he wants to go to an art studentââ¬â¢s ball; and that Jim gets him a ticket and costume, the image we are offered is a simple one of the two playing dominoes. This image, incidentally, becomes a leitmotif in the film, supporting the theme of friendship and is touchingly varied much later when Jules plays instead with his daughter. Next, the narrator tells us that their friendship grows; the ball takes place; that Jules has tender eyes.
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