Escolar Documentos
Profissional Documentos
Cultura Documentos
by Alifeleti Brown
As is often the case with critical discussion of Godard and his films, writing on Histoire(s)
emphasises the work’s difficult-to-summarise multiplicity of concerns and techniques coupled
with an experimental leaning that resists being reduced to a grammatical formal strategy. In this
instance, as one writer has neatly observed, Histoire(s) is simultaneously:
Despite the diffuse gesture of Histoire(s), it might be argued that its central motivation is to
collapse the cinema from within by way of an exhaustive process of reflexive audio-visual
evocation and deliberation, a post-cinematic montage that implicitly situates the cinema as an
archive of a bygone era.
It helps here to think of Godard, as Susan Sontag does, entering “the history of film as its first
consciously destructive figure” (3). Despite many mutations and digressions, Godard’s career
may be characterised by a tendency to dissolve definitive limits in and around the cinema. This
can be traced through the many seemingly arrogant, specious and heavy-handed aphoristic
devices he has used in interviews and films to observe not only his own work but also the cinema
more generally. These include: a denial of an opposition between fiction and documentary;
exposing the paradox of the socially engaging and disengaging qualities of the cinema; exploring
the affinities between visual and written expression, as well as art and criticism; privileging the
more expansive terms sound and image over other possible permutations; overriding the divide
between high and low culture; merging theory and practice; and equating reality with the image
(“For Godard reality was always already image”. [4]). Histoire(s) can be seen to enact all of
these concepts to some degree. However, Histoire(s) can be linked more generally to Godard’s
provocative and often misunderstood statements about the death of cinema, including one
famously revealing instance when he claimed, “I await the end of the cinema with optimism” (5)
– a statement which perhaps best encapsulates Godard’s de(con)structive proclivity.
Godard’s concept of the death of cinema has evolved across his career, mourning, at various
stages: the abandonment of the creative and poetic possibilities posed by cinematic imagery of
the silent era; the collapse of an American studio system of mass-production which indirectly
fostered a range of visionary artists and popularised film as an art form; the failure of poetic,
artistic and socially-engaged cinema to counteract the fascistic and capitalistic roles of cinema in
history; and how the Hollywood model of Steven Spielberg and spectacle came to dominate
internationally, curbing the survival and development of other models of film production and
development. Histoire(s) dutifully revisits each of these sites of death, mourning the multiple
corruptions of a cinema of pure possibility, and the viral, exploitative and capitalistic qualities of
image production and dissemination, and expressing nostalgia for a cinema “that might have
been” (6). The work presents a multiplicity of visions of the end of a cinema industrially and
aesthetically tied to the political events of a specific time and place. Histoire(s) in part suggests
that the cinema not only ends at a particular historical crossroads, it also begins (or if it dies, it
also kills) – the history of one trope of cinema overcoming another. Lofty sentiments aside, it is
the manner in which Histoire(s) produces these articulations and documentations through video
that constitutes Godard’s most compelling cinematic coup de grâce.
Histoire(s) can partly be seen as an outcome of Godard’s major revelations during this period of
his career, particularly in regard to the relationship between the cinematic image, montage and
history. Histoire(s) reprises an inquiry into claims for the cinema as the “seventh art”, the art
subsuming all the previous arts, the art for the masses, the quintessential modern art, and the art
form of the 20th century. But it also reveals the cinema as a reluctant historical artefact, a
battlefield evidencing the interplay of national, cultural, political, aesthetic and industrial
interests. For Godard cinema has been a privileged witness to 20th century, absorbing its shocks
and impacts, whilst also helping to engender them. Revisiting the artifacts of cinema therefore
enables a new approach to practicing history that works upon the “cinematograph” to uncover
and produce its historical value:
Histoire(s) surpasses mere documentation by effectively recasting cinema’s history – its passing
and its death – as an impetus to think and create, reflect and imagine rather than producing
history as a fixed and static list or chronology of events. As Gilles Deleuze argues in Cinema 2:
The Time-Image (a book which bears many parallels to Histoire(s)), cinema must always
recognise “the need to go beyond mere information” (9). Histoire(s) does this by seeking to yield
new conceptual life from the perishable images of cinematographic history, evoking new
perspectives and associations only attainable through hindsight. This works in combination with
Godard’s renewed concept of montage as the edifice of artistic connection itself or, put simply,
of thinking with images. This allows Godard to make the seemingly audacious claim that
“Cinema was the true art of montage that began 5 or 6 centuries B.C.” (10). Michael Witt
deciphers:
Despite its limitations in terms of resolution and fidelity, video retains the audio-visual and
temporal conditions for this connective and constructive operation. Godard’s revelation is that
video is actually better at montage, making it more possible. Histoire(s) exercises the immediacy
of the post-cinematic form of image production, turning video’s capacity for selection,
augmentation, dissemination, integration and experimental montage back towards its mysterious
cinematic origins. Using video to think through cinematic imagery to create and reveal
connections, Godard produces the kind of history made possible by the cinema, suggesting that
the saving grace of both cinema and the 20th century lies in is its residual capacity to be reflected
upon.
Hopefully the considerations presented in this annotation will help to dilute for some the
mystique of Godard’s vast and overwhelming videographic composition. There exists a wealth
of critical elucidations of Histoire(s), however the only form of writing that might come close to
doing justice to Godard’s exhaustive work would probably be the notation produced by Celine
Scemama that delineates the source of each and every quotation, available on the web in French
(12). On a final point of interest, Histoire(s), whilst freely exploiting so many sources which are
quite clearly copyrighted, reserves no copyright of its own. In this sense Godard can be credited
with both anticipating and pioneering more contemporary movements in digital remix/sample
culture, and the copyright defying concepts of pla(y)giarism, remixology and Creative
Commons. One is left to wonder whether Gaumont’s securing the rights for the DVD release has
actually set some kind of legal precedent for video quotation (Rosenbaum has made similar
speculations in an interview with Godard [13]).
Surely, the mastery of Histoire(s) ebbs from Godard’s particular status in the cinema, his tireless
devotion and aptitude for quotation and connection – as if he is the sole channel through which
the madness and chaos of so much ephemera finds any bearing. Histoire(s) reveals Godard to be
an optimistic agent of cinema’s untimely death(s), looking toward and pioneering “a cinema that
might be”, and evoking cinema’s end as a necessary and life-affirming transition.
Endnotes
Program 1a: “Toutes les historie(s)” (“All the [Hi]stories”) 51 mins; Program 1b: “Une histoire
seule” (“A Lone [Hi]story”) 42 mins; Program 2a: “Seule le cinema” (“Cinema Alone”) 26 mins;
Program 2b: “Fatale beauté” (“Deadly Beauty”) 28 mins; Program 3a: “La monnaie de l’absolu”
(“Coinage of the Absolute”) 27 mins; Program 3b: “Une vague nouvelle” (“A New Wave”) 27
mins; Program 4a: “Le contrôle de l’univers” (“Control of the Universe”) 27 mins; Program 4b:
“Les signes parmi nous” (“Signs Among Us”) 38 mins
Cast: Jean-Luc Godard, Julie Delpy, Serge Daney, Anne-Marie Miéville, Juliette Binoche, André
Malraux, Paul Celan
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Alifeleti Brown graduated in 2007 with a Cinema Studies Major from RMIT University,
Melbourne.
http://archive.sensesofcinema.com/contents/cteq/08/46/histoires-cinema.html#b10