In the early Eighties
at Cahiers French cinema became a
renewed area of interest and this was celebrated in their two special 30th
anniversary issues (May and June 1981). Through these issues Cahiers were able to strengthen their
ties with the French film industry and its producers, directors and actors.
Even though articles on Godard had already been a standard feature since
Daney’s early editorship now finally the rest of the nouvelle vague directors would become a renewed area of
interest for the magazine.
In
1980 Daney and Toubiana met Truffaut in an effort of reconciliation as he had
been actively neglected from the magazine. They discussed the new philosophy of
the magazine and requested help with financing that Truffaut would help to
arrange. After their meeting Truffaut would say that he now had an ‘open
neutrality’ towards Cahiers.
As a result of this meeting, a lengthy interview with Truffaut would follow and
would be published throughout two issues in 1980. It builds upon the two
previous interviews with Truffaut. (This makes Truffaut the less interviewed nouvelle
vague director. The
other interviews include with Jean Collet, Michel Delahaye, Jean-André Fieschi
from December 1962 and with Jean-Louis Comolli and Jean Narboni from 1967).
The
Événement film that sparked the encounters with Truffaut was Le Dernier Métro. The film was publicized on the magazine’s cover and a
positive review, Une nuit au theatre
by Yann Lardeau, was printed
along with the interview. Truffaut, who represents French popular cinema,
received an equal amount of attention as Godard.
The
first part of the Truffaut interview by Daney, Narboni and Toubiana appeared in
the September 1980 issue. The Événement was prefaced by Toubiana, Truffaut ou
le juste milieu comme experience limite. The last interview the magazine had done with Truffaut was
in 1967 (which was entitled, Le juste milieu) for Fahrenheit 451, and since then Truffaut made 13 more
films.
Toubiana
wrote,
There
was thirteen years of silence or non-dialogue (there were some critiques of his
films, but no interviews) between us and Truffaut because of our attachment to
theory and our political chores. What we were looking for in the Seventies were
what you could call limit experiences – far from the ‘juste milieu’ which preoccupied Truffaut.
Toubiana then argued
that what Truffaut was doing at the juste milieu was a limit experience of the center of
French society and film production. The extreme qualifier is that Truffaut was
making the films that he wanted to make and he had the independence to
make them through his own production company. It’s a paradoxical and
contradictory proposition. Truffaut is not trying to distinguish himself from
the other professionals in the French film industry but he’s not part of the
Qualité française which he in the past denounced. Toubiana’s perspective offers
a different way to look at Truffaut’s more conventional works. Cahiers was in perpetual evolution and it
constantly tried to gaze beneath the surface of things.
In
the interview Truffaut was very frank and modest. On his work as a director he
said, “Finally, what makes me the happiest about cinema is that it gives me the
best job possible.” “I don’t
see an incompatibility between the terms auteur and professional.” “I work better
with director-producers that work hard - Rohmer, Mocky, Berri – than with those
that complain like spoiled children that deserve everything.” On Godard, who he
thought was ‘compulsively jealous,’ Truffaut undermined his more high-minded
statements by showing the simple, uncaring arguments behind them:
When
Rivette received one of the largest advances on receipts - 200 million for four
films - Godard went after him in Pariscope. ‘The pleasure of Rivette is the same as
Verneuil but it’s not mine. Rivette has no longer any humanity.’ And then it
was Rohmer’s turn when everyone admired La Marquise d’O, Godard criticized it. When Resnais won six or seven Césars for Providence, Jean-Luc, as you can expect, turned
against him saying ‘Resnais hasn’t
made any good films since Hiroshima.’
On
his distancing himself from Cahiers, Truffaut said
“I’ve stepped back from Cahiers
since the day where I made my first film. I had the sense of changing camps
[from critic to filmmaker].”
The
interview with Truffaut signaled a major shift at Cahiers from Daney’s often enigmatic editorial
stances to Toubiana’s more populist ones. Godard would not necessarily be
dropped but he would no longer be as fetishized. Truffaut and other
popular French directors would start to get equal coverage. Cahiers and Toubiana, drawing from Bazin,
Truffaut, Hitchcock, and Chaplin, would show how strong personal art works
could be created within the popular film industry.
2 comments:
Hello David, thanks for sharing glimpses of your work. This confirms me that Godard was not very open to the success of its old friends !
I wonder if what is saying Toubiana about Truffaut's movies, "juste milieu", is the same idea as for the concept created by Pascale Ferran and others in the 2000s in France : "les films du milieu". Some directors considered that movies "du milieu", who have middle budget, a quite famous team, and an ambition different from experimental, marginal movies, or blockbusters, have became rare in the French industry.
Do you know this concept ? Here is a link : http://www.cahiersducinema.com/Le-Rapport-Ferran-Extraits.html
Hey Oriane,
Thanks for commenting. The two concepts are probably a little similar. What Toubiana is arguing, I think, is that Truffaut at the center of French cinema was also a limit experience (though different than that of the political avant-garde) and that he was still an independent auteur at the center of French film production, which separates him from the Qualite Francaise, which he used to be against.
D.
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