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Revisiting the Relevance of Conceptualism of Godard’s Film |
107www.jrfm.eu
2018, 4/2, 83–113
that was an honest aim, especially in view of the limitations of cinema that God-
ard strived to explicate in his cinematic expression, we know not, but we could
endlessly talk about. Whether that was also a goal that could be proven passé in
view of (a) the pending shifts to punk and electro minimalism that many pop arts
were to undergo shortly after the pretentious, prog-rock, Sgt. Pepperish trends
paralleling the peak of La Nouvelle Vague were over, and (b) the minimalism that
the European cinema had to embrace to differentiate itself from the pageantry of
Hollywood, we know not either. With all these things changed, maybe everything
in Godard’s art that resonated solely with the 1960s generation would have been
made timeless and maybe even Week-end (FR/IT 1967), that parody of almost eve-
ry single feature of the Hollywood blockbusters of the 1960s, would be a more
relevant movie today than it is. As it stands now, understanding Godard requires
perceiving him from a stance well familiarized with the history of cinema. Even
more importantly, it requires focusing on the invisibles, on that implicit message
hidden at the conceptual, not plainly visible, level of expression. The subtlety of
such an approach to communication, of course, presents beauty in itself.
ART FOR THE DIMINISHMENT OF THE ART’S SAKE
Still, wonder remains if all these drawbacks were deliberate, serving the pur-
pose of annihilating oneself for the sake of becoming One with all that there
is; destroying the cinema for the sake of pulling the dreamers away from its
darkened rooms and into the daylight of life, the destination of every dreamer’s
dream. In his most recent movie, Adieu au Langage, Godard toys with the ety-
Fig. 12: Week-end (Jean-Luc
Godard, FR/IT 1967). The
epic final screenshot drawing
the curtain on cinema in
Godard’s eyes and on the entire
La Nouvelle Vague era. The
carpet bomb was detonated,
everything that made cinema
what it was lay deconstructed
and demolished, and the end
of cinema as we had known it
could be announced. Would
all other social spheres be
revitalized, fostered to evolve at
an unprecedented rate or simply
be sentenced to permanent desertion and infertility had everybody’s aim been to create something
similar to what Godard strived to create under this “the end of cinema” banner, that is, to shatter
the paradigm, to get rid of the old, to erase the standards and, effectively, abolish the need for the
given sphere to exist under the Sun?
JRFM
Journal Religion Film Media, Volume 04/02
- Title
- JRFM
- Subtitle
- Journal Religion Film Media
- Volume
- 04/02
- Authors
- Christian Wessely
- Daria Pezzoli-Olgiati
- Editor
- Uni-Graz
- Publisher
- SchĂĽren Verlag GmbH
- Location
- Graz
- Date
- 2018
- Language
- English
- License
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Size
- 14.8 x 21.0 cm
- Pages
- 135
- Categories
- Zeitschriften JRFM