|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
Director |
|
Year |
2003 |
Country |
Eva Green, Michael Pitt, Louis Garrel
Certificate |
18 |
Length |
110 mins |
Label |
20CFX |
Format |
DVD Colour |
Region |
2 |
Aspect |
Widescreen |
Cat No |
25057DVD |
Main Language |
English |
Bertolucci's startlingly seductive meditation on Paris May 1968 juxtaposes three strands of revolution - political, cinematic, and sexual. The first strand is given short shrift and is at best dodgy: why are the demonstrators shown as communists when they were in the main gauchistes (anarchists, trotskyists, maoists)? The second strand is clever, risky and often brilliant, as in the reprise of the race through the Louvre from Godard's Bande a Part (1964). The third strand is so dominant that a friend of mine was provoked to comment as follows: "Pretty please with a cherry on top - spare us an old man's wet dreams." Or is the old man successfully heightening the graphic transgressive sex we all loved in Last Tango in Paris (1972)?
It is his most interesting film since Last Tango. Some viewers will reflect on how politics, cinema and sex connect. After all did not that cultural revolution which fused the political and the personal bring ten million workers out on strike, almost topple the French government, and arguably change the face of the world?
The games played by Eva Green (stunningly generous with her bodily fluids as Isabelle), Louis Garrel (utopianly ardent as her incestuous twin Theo), and Michael Pitt (the baby-faced American innocent abroad as Matthew) may be infantile. And yet the left-wing communism whch Lenin called infantile was defended by the student leader Daniel Cohn-Bendit in his Obsolete Communism: The Left Wing Alternative (1968). And "Take your desires for reality" was a central slogan o May 68. But the politics of all this is barely addressed in the film. And of course everything is recuperable. Even the Guardian Weekend (21/8/04) can see The Dreamers as a mere exercise in radical chic.
Bertolucci's film is irksomely ambitious. There is a dearth of intelligent films on 1968. Nothing surpasses Godard's La Chinoise (1967) and Weekend (1968). The spectator of The Dreamers is left perplexed and dazzled rather than delighted and enlightened. Is the film homage or satire? Where does Bertolucci stand? Does he do justice to the cultural revolution launched in the name of Henri Langlois' Cinematheque against De Gaulle's minister of culture Andre Malraux? Is his film a fitting tribute to 1968, or a fragrantly decadent cop-out? And in the last resort does The Dreamers live up to Yeats's slogan "In dreams begins responsibility"?
John Hoyles on 1st October 2004
Share your thoughts - write a review
By The Infamous Evil Spike on 9th November 2005
A unique film that you only watch once. more >
By MovieMail on 1st October 2004
The first thing is that Bertolucci produces a terrific homage to cinema in his dream of Paris 1968. In words, cuts and mise-en-scene there are implicit and explicit re... more >
View all 8 film stills in full size
MovieMail Latest
Browse our Film catalogue: DVDs by Genre | DVDs by Country | DVDs by Director | DVDs by Actor
New Releases | Bestsellers | Recommended | Special Offers | MovieMail Latest
|
|
For questions or assistance, call us on (+44) 0844 776 0900 or email on enquiries@moviemail-online.co.uk
© 2008 MovieMail, Ltd., All Rights Reserved. Find out more about MovieMail