* (restored/expanded)
Saturday, 10 March 2007, 2:30pm: a cinema located in the basement level of the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris. It is a screening of rare German short films dating from the 1960s and ’70s, as part of the 29th Cinéma du réel International Documentary Film Festival. Included in the programme is the 15-minute film essay, Einleitung zu Arnold Schönbergs ‘Begleitmusik zu einer Lichtspielscene’ (Introduction to Arnold Schoenberg’s Accompaniment to an Animation Scene, 1972), made by Jean-Marie Straub and Danièle Huillet. As the encouragingly large number of spectators settles into their seats, a commotion can be heard from outside. Suddenly, a group of fifty or so activists bursts forcefully through the doors. Dispersing what look like pre-Photoshop-era leaflets throughout the audience, the group, made up largely of self-identifying unemployed young people, demands to be permitted to watch the film programme for free, incensed that a publicly-funded festival should be charging admission to its screenings, and advocating a more generalised divorce between art and commerce.
Affronted by this protest, the Festival director, after ordering the projectionist not to proceed with the screening, and enlisting physically intimidating security guards to make their presence felt in the theatre, intervenes personally, declaring to the crowd (to their credit, the paying audience sides almost unanimously with the protestors, despite the inconvenience) that she will not be “terrorised” into allowing the screening to go ahead, thus provoking a prolonged occupation of the salle. In the end, the planned programme of films never takes place.
Perhaps the Festival director should have been more careful with her words when equating the protestors with terrorists. Straub himself would no doubt have enjoyed the irony. Less than a year earlier, he had explained his and Huillet’s absence from the 2006 Venice Film Festival, where their last film, Quei loro incontri (The Meeting, 2006), was to be honoured, with the following missive: “I wouldn’t be able to be festive in a festival where there are so many public and private police looking for a terrorist – I am the terrorist, and I tell you, paraphrasing Franco Fortini: so long as there’s American imperialistic capitalism, there’ll never be enough terrorists in the world.” The statement shocked the festival-goers so much that Cameron Crowe, a member of the jury panel, even suggested that their prize for “invention of cinematic language in the ensemble of their work” be rescinded.
Such controversy was never very far away from the work of Straub-Huillet, whose collaboration was terminated with Huillet’s death due to cancer in October 2006, an event which caused an outpouring of grief from members of what Serge Daney dubbed the “Internationale Straubienne”. In 1976, West German television refused to air their adaptation of Arnold Schönberg’s Moses und Aron (Moses and Aaron, 1974) without excising the dedication to Holger Meins (a cameraman and imprisoned member of the Rote Armee Fraktion) appended to the start of the film. Their particular brand of Marxism, exhibited in films of theirs such as Les Yeux ne veulent pas en tout temps se fermer, ou Peut-être qu’un jour Rome se permetta de choisir à son tour (The Eyes do not Want to be Closed at all times, or Possibly Rome will allow itself to choose in its turn, more commonly known as Othon, 1969) and Geschichtsunterricht (History Lessons, 1972), incited fervent debate within European film circles. Even earlier, Straub-Huillet were mercilessly attacked for dedicating a film on the life of Johann Sebastian Bach to the Viet Cong, while the inaugural screening of their first feature, Nicht Versöhnt ode Es hilft nur Gewalt wo Gewalt herrscht (Not Reconciled, 1965), at the Berlinale provoked such an antithetical response from the audience of left intellectuals that Richard Roud was to say it made “the reception of L’Avventura [Michelangelo Antonioni, 1960] at Cannes seem like a triumph by comparison”. The film so baffled author Heinrich Böll, on whose story the script was based, that he stood by while his publishers threatened to burn the film’s negative.
Jean-Marie Straub and Danièle HuilletSuch opposition was matched by equally passionate defence of their work in other corners of the European cultural milieu. Darlings of the Cahiers du Cinéma journalists during their Marxist turn, as well as journals such as Screen and Filmkritik in the 1970s, Straub-Huillet also had significant portions of Gilles Deleuze’s seminal Cinéma books devoted to their work. Even today, critics such as Jonathon Rosenbaum and Tag Gallagher have made passionate pleas for the recognition of their contribution to the seventh art. And yet their output has had a singular failure to find even the kind of niche audience enjoyed by Godard, Rainer Werner Fassbinder or Pier Paolo Pasolini. Encouragingly, though, a revival of interest in their films is occurring. Recent DVD releases in the French-, German- and English-speaking markets have made their work far more accessible than it was even a couple of years ago. In France in particular, Straub-Huillet are presently the focus of unprecedented academic interest, with numerous monographs dedicated to them, and this interest is bolstered by continued retrospectives and public appearances by Straub.
And yet, while those critical of their work are quick to pounce on it as “unintelligible, inaudible”, or simply “boring”, even supporters of “the Straubs” are often ready to concede that their films are “intellectual, dry, difficult”. Adjectives such as “ascetic”, “rigorous” and even “Jansenist” preponderate in critical reviews, and their work is invariably conceived as combining a Brechtian politico-æsthetic programme with the cinematographic austerity of Robert Bresson and Carl Th. Dreyer. But, while these figures are certainly important influences on Straub-Huillet, such a conception unjustly narrows the scope of their work. D. W. Griffith, Kenji Mizoguchi and, as Gallagher has gone to great lengths to detail, John Ford are just as important precursors to Straub-Huillet as Bresson or Dreyer, while Schönberg, Friedrich Hölderlin and Cesare Pavese have featured just as prominently as Bertold Brecht as source material. Focussing purely on the rigour and anti-spectacular quality of their work overlooks the intense viscerality of the performances of their usually non-professional “actors”, and the equally sensual role of the material environment in their work: insect noises, mountainous backdrops, ruins of the ancient world, the rushing of a stream, the sun, the wind. Straub is fond of quoting Griffith that, “What the modern movie lacks is beauty – the beauty of moving wind in the trees.” — Senses of Cinema
___
Stills
_____
Further
Straub-Huillet Website
‘Authenticity as a Political Act: Straub-Huillet’s Post-War Bach Revival’
Obituary: Danièle Huillet
Visual identity, book and website for the ‘Straub-Huillet’ film show
Serge Daney on S-H’s ‘Too Early, Too Late’
Serge Daney ‘Une Morale de la Perception’
S-H interviewed @ Jumpcut
S-H Facebook page
‘Resistance: Danièle Huillet Tribute’
‘Encountering Elusive Cinema: Tati, Straub-Huillet and Antonioni’
‘One Frame Apart: On Straub and Huillet and Pedro Costa’s Where Does Your Secret Smile Lie?
Jonathan Rosenbaum’s ‘Once it was Fire’
‘Class Relations’ @ cineaste
‘Jean-Marie Straub and Daniele Huillet talk about Ford, Fassbinder and their own films’
‘”Danger menaçant, peur, catastrophe”. Huillet-Straub-Farocki: une éthique du cinéma documentaire’
INTERNACIONAL STRAUB-HUILLET
‘Sound: Moses and Aaron’ @ Film Comment
‘A propósito de Straub-Huillet’
____
Extras
Gilles Deleuze on Straub-Huillet Cinema 1987 English Subs
Harun Farocki ‘Straub & Huillet at work’ (1983)
Jean-Marie Straub et Danièle Huillet in debate with Paul Virilo & Philippe Quéaut (French)
Pedro Costa films Jean-Marie Straub and Danièle Huillet during their editing of Sicilia!
Danièle Huillet by Gérard Courant – Cinématon #343
Jean-Marie Straub by Gérard Courant – Cinématon #342
______
Materials
Annotated script for Une visite au Louvre (Visit to the Louvre) (2004)
Camera position for Act II of The Death of Empedocles, based on Straub’s screenplay sketch.
Shooting notebook for ‘Klassenverhältnisse’ (Class Relations) (1984)
______
Interview: Direct Sound
from douban
Italy has, to the rest of the world, the reputation of being the country that dubs ‘the best.’ The Italians don’t just dub the foreign films, but Italian ones as well: they are shot without sound, or with an international sound track, then they are dubbed. You are members of that group – and they are few enough – who film directly with sound; that is, who film the images and record at the same time the sounds of those images.
Straub: Dubbing is not only a technique, it’s also an ideology. In a dubbed film, there is not the least rapport between what you see and what you hear. The dubbed cinema is the cinema of lies, mental laziness, and violence, because it gives no space to the viewer and makes him still more deaf and insensitive. In Italy, every day the people are becoming more deaf at a terrifying rate.
Huillet: The thing is still sadder when you think that it’s in Italy that, in a certain sense, Western music, polyphony, was born.
Straub: The world of sound is much more vast than the visual world. Dubbing, as it is practiced in Italy, does not work with the sound to enrich it, to give more to the viewer. The greatest part of the waves that a film contains come from the sound, and if in relation to the images the sound is lazy, greedy, and puritan, what sense does that make? But then, it takes courage to make silent films.
Huillet: The great silent films give the viewers the freedom to imagine the sound. A dubbed film doesn’t even do that.
Straub: The waves that a sound transmits are not just sound waves. The waves of ideas, movements, emotions, travel across the sound. The waves that we hear in a Pasolini film, for example, are restrictive. They do not enhance the image, they kill it.
There are filmmakers like Robert Bresson or, better, Jacques Tati who use dubbing intelligently. Certain Tati films would be much less rich if they didn’t have artificial sound.
Straub: You can make a dubbed film, but it is necessary to use a hundred times more imagination and work to make a direct-sound film. In effect, the sonorous reality that you record is so rich that to erase it and replace it with another sonorous reality (to dub a film) would take three or four times the amount of time needed to shoot the film. On the contrary, the films are usually dubbed in three days, and sometimes in a day and a half, there is no work. It would make sense to shoot without sound and then make an effort with the sound, in counterpoint to the image. But filmmakers tend to paste the background noises to the silent images that give the impression of reality, the voices that don’t belong to the faces we see. It’s boring, vain, and a terrible parasitism.
Filming with sound costs less than dubbing.
Straub: Yes, but that would kill the dubbing industry and it violates the local customs.
Huillet: Directors prefer to dub out of laziness: if you have decided to make a film with direct sound, the locations that you choose have to be right not only in terms of the images but also in terms of the sound.
Straub: And that is translated into a thorough analysis of the whole film. For example, our last film, Moses und Aron, the Schoenberg opera, we shot in the Roman amphitheatre of Alba Fucense, near Avezzano, in Abruzzi. But we weren’t looking for an ancient theatre. What we wanted was simply a high plateau, dominated, if possible, by a mountain. We started to look for this plateau four years ago, in a borrowed car, and we put 11,000 kilometres on it, driving more on back roads and country lanes than on paved roads, through all of Southern Italy, down to the middle of Sicily. In the course of this research, we didn’t see one plateau, no matter how beautiful, that was good for the sound, because when we found ourselves on a plateau, everything was lost in the air and the wind. And, if there was a valley, we were assaulted by the noises from below. We were therefore obliged to reconsider our intentions and we discovered what we wanted, which was a basin or crater. And in the end, we saw that to film in a basin, in our case the amphitheatre, was better for the images also, because we had a natural theatrical space in which the subject, instead of being dissolved, was concentrated. We followed the opposite course of the Taviani brothers or Pasolini, who look for pretty spots, postcards such as you see in magazines, in which the subject of the film is dissipated instead of being localised. For us, the necessity of filming with direct sound, of recording all the singers you see in the frame, of getting at the same time their songs and their bodies that sing, led us to discoveries that meant we arrived at an idea that we would never have had otherwise.
Filming in direct sound means also editing in a certain way, rather than in another.
Straub: That’s obvious. When you film in direct sound, you can’t allow yourself to play with the images: you have blocks of a certain length and you can’t use the scissors any way you want, for pleasure, for effect.
Huillet: It’s exactly the impossibility of playing with the editing that is discouraging. You can’t edit direct sound as you edit the films you are going to dub: each image has a sound and you’re forced to respect it. Even when the frame is empty, when the character leaves the shot, you can’t cut, because you continue to hear off-camera the sound of receding footsteps. In a dubbed film, you wait only for the last piece of the foot to leave the range of the camera to cut.
Many filmmakers don’t believe in an empty frame with sound that continues off-camera, because they want cinema to be a frame: it should have nothing outside. They deny the existence of a world outside the frame. In your films, the off-screen space is something that exists and is materially felt.
Straub: That’s another illusion of the dubbed film. Not only are the lips that move on the screen not the ones that say the words you hear, but the space itself becomes illusionary. Filming in direct sound you can’t fool with the space, you have to respect it, and in doing so offer the viewer the chance to reconstruct it, because film is made up of ‘extracts’ of time and space. It’s possible to not respect the space you are filming, but then you have to give the viewer the possibility of understanding why it has not been respected and not, as in dubbed films, transform a real space into a constructed labyrinth which puts the viewer into a confusion from which he can no longer escape. The viewer becomes a dog who can’t find its young.
In sum, direct sound is not merely a technical decision but a moral and ideological one: it changes the whole film and especially the rapport that is established between the film and the viewer.
Huillet: I must say this: when you arrive at the conclusion that you must do a film like that, you cut yourself off from the industry, more or less completely. If you refuse to film with just a general sound track, if you refuse to dub your film, if you refuse to use such and such an actor because he’s been seen too much and it’s absurd to always use the same faces, it’s over. You cut yourself off completely. In fact, the main reason for dubbing is industrial: only by accepting the dictatorship of dubbing can you use two or three stars from different countries in the same film.
Straub: And the result is an international product, something stripped of words, onto which each country grafts its respective language. Languages that don’t belong to the lips, words that don’t belong to the faces. But it’s a product that sells well. Everything becomes illusion. There is no longer any truth. In the end, even the ideas and emotions become false. For example, in Allonsanfan, and I mention this film because it’s not worth talking about Petri’s or Lizzani’s, there is not a single moment, not one instant where there is a true, human emotion. Not even by accident, by chance. It’s trash. It has only the illusion of a comic book.
Many filmmakers identify the international aesthetic with the popular aesthetic, and accept dubbing, stars from different countries, and the rest, because they think it’s the only way to make successful films.
Straub: The international aesthetic is an invention and weapon of the bourgeoisie. The popular aesthetic is always a personal aesthetic.
For the bourgeoisie, there is no art that is not universal. The international aesthetic is like Esperanto.
Straub: Exactly. Esperanto has always been the dream of the bourgeoisie.
___________________
18 of Straub-Huillet’s 29 films
_______________________
Not Reconciled or Only Violence Helps Where Violence Rules (1965)
‘Not Reconciled (Nicht versöhnt) is a 1965 West German drama film directed by Jean-Marie Straub. It has the subtitle Only Violence Helps Where Violence Reigns (Es hilft nur Gewalt wo Gewalt herrscht). The film is an adaptation of the 1959 novel Billiards at Half-past Nine by Heinrich Böll. Richard Brody of The New Yorker reviewed the film in 2008: “Straub and Huillet make the layers of history live in the present tense, which they judge severely. The tamped-down acting and the spare, tense visual rhetoric suggest a state of moral crisis as well as the response—as much in style as in substance—that it demands.”‘ — collaged
the entire film w/ commentary by Richard Brody
_________________
The Chronicle of Anna Magdalena Bach (1968)
‘In February 1968, a fateful year perhaps better remembered for its political upheavals, student uprisings, assassinations and the escalation of the Vietnam War than its cinematic achievements, a curiously backward-looking film premiered at the 1968 Cinemanifestatie Festival in Utrecht. The Chronicle of Anna Magdalena Bach, directed by Jean-Marie Straub and Danièle Huillet, reconstructs the life of Johann Sebastian Bach through an examination of his music and documents, and stars the Dutch harpsichordist Gustav Leonhardt as the composer. The film, which consists mainly of musical performances of Bach’s music, is narrated from the perspective of his second wife, portrayed by Christiane Lang-Drewanz, who recounts the activities of their day-to-day life in Cöthen and Leipzig. How could an austere film about Bach’s life and music, set in a remote eighteenth-century sound- and landscape, have been produced in the midst of the ferment and discontent of the late 1960s?’ — Kailan R. Rubinoff
Excerpt
the entire film (sans subtitles)
Straub-Huillet shooting the film
________________
The Bridegroom, the Comedienne and the Pimp (1968)
‘Three sequences are linked together in this short film by Straub; the first sequence is a long tracking shot from a car of prostitutes plying their trade on the night-time streets of Germany; the second is a staged play, cut down to 10 minutes by Straub and photographed in a single take; the final sequence covers the marriage of James and Lilith, and Lilith’s subsequent execution of her pimp, played by Rainer Werner Fassbinder.’ — IMDb
the entire film
_________________
History Lessons (1972)
‘Set in contemporary Rome, the film shows through a series of encounters with “ancient” Romans, how the economic and political manipulation by ancient Roman society led to Caesar’s dictatorship. The end of history. Analog and digital recordings have forced history to produce its own history, thus turn it into a very mortal thing: like a person who lives and passes. There’s no longer a writer and myth in between. History Lessons shows this loss and conflict ruthlessly. One of the true wonders of cinema that came out of the Straub/Huillet collaboration. History as labyrinth and cities as the realization of that maze.’ — muni
the entire film
________________
Moses und Aron (1973)
‘Moses und Aron is based on the unfinished opera of the same title by Arnold Schoenberg. During its 1975 run at US festivals, it was also known as Aaron and Moses, and was frequently reviewed as such. It is one of three films based on Schoenberg works Straub and Huillet directed, the other two being Begleitungsmusik zu einer Lichtspielscene, a short film made directly before Moses und Aron, and, over two decades later, an adaptation of the one-act comic opera Von heute auf morgen. The film retains the unfinished nature of the original opera, with the third act consisting of a single shot (with no music) as Moses delivers a monologue based on Schoenberg’s notes.’ — collaged
Trailer
Excerpt
__________________
Every Revolution Is a Throw of the Dice (1977)
‘For spectators who don’t know what to do with their films, Jean-Marie Straub and Daniele Huillet offer a rigorous program that’s all work and no play–a grueling process of wrestling with intractable texts, often in languages that one doesn’t understand, without the interest provided by easy-to-read characters or compelling plots. But in fact every one of Straub-Huillet’s 15 films to date (10 features and 5 shorts) offers an arena of play as well as work, and opportunities for sensual enjoyment as well as analytical reflection. In Every Revolution Is a Throw of the Dice, (1977) a group of nine men and women recited Mallarme’s “A Throw of the Dice Will Never Abolish Chance” while seated in Paris’s Pere Lachaise cemetery near a plaque commemorating the Paris Commune victims of 1871; but the delivery was comically poker-faced.’ — Chicago Reader
the entire film
__________________
From the Cloud to the Resistance (1979)
‘Straub/Huillet’s From the Cloud to the Resistance has been summarized by Straub as follows: “From the cloud, that is from the invention of the gods by man, to the resistance of the latter against the former as much as to the resistance against Fascism. The film is based on two works by Cesare Pavese, falls into the category of History Lessons and Too Early, Too Late as well. It, too, has two parts—a twentieth-century text and a text regarding the myths of antiquity, each set in the appropriate landscape. Pavese’s The Moon and the Bonfires looks back on the violent deaths of Italian anti-Fascist resistance fighters; Dialogues with Leucò is a series of dialogues between heroes and gods, connecting myth and history and returning to an ambiguous stage in the creation of distinctions, such as that between animal and human, which are fundamental to grammar and language itself.”‘ — worldscinema.org
Excerpt
Excerpt
________________
En rachâchant (1982)
‘En rachâchant is a comic tale based on Marguerite Duras’ story Ah! Ernesto, about a young boy who refuses to go to school because they only teach him things he doesn’t know. 1982, France, in French with English subtitles, 35mm, 9 minutes.’ — Walker Art Center
the entire film
_______________
Too Soon, Too Late (1982)
‘Opening upon one of the most memorable shots ever filmed, Too Soon, Too Late is an essay on the often tentative, yet urgent conditions of revolution. Shot in France and Egypt, the film employs a diptych structure as it attempts to (quite literally) catch the wind of past revolutions, using the writings of Friedrich Engels and Mahmoud Hussein. Too Soon, Too Late inverts the usual relationship in a Straub-Huillet film between landscape and text – the landscape becoming the film’s central text, the verbal text becoming the film’s “setting”. Practically speaking, this reduces the relative importance of the verbal texts in the films – although when I mentioned this notion to Straub, he countered that nevertheless the film could never have been made without those texts.’ — collaged
Excerpt
Excerpt
_______________
Class Relations (1983)
‘A high point of Straub-Huillet’s cinema, this adaptation of Kafka’s first novel Amerika fuses the writer’s dreamlike vision with a Marxist analysis of master-servant relations; the result is hypnotic, provocative, and often surprisingly funny. Scrupulously drawing all of its dialogue directly from the novel, Class Relations recounts the fate of young German immigrant Karl Rossman, who accepts his nouveau riche uncle’s invitation to move to New York (Hamburg stands in for Manhattan, though the Statue of Liberty makes an iconic appearance), where he encounters an increasingly strange America of unwarranted optimism and quickness to assign guilt. Kafka’s working title for the novel was The Man Who Disappeared, and if Karl doesn’t exactly vanish in the New World, he maintains an inexpressive dignity in the face of its many humiliations, before finally setting out for Oklahoma and what is certain to be more misadventure. Performed with Bressonian precision, and featuring a supporting cast that is a cinephilic treasure trove (Harun Farocki, Laura Betti, Thom Andersen!), Class Relations is “a great film — which is to say, a film like any other, only greater…. See it!” (Gilbert Adair, Sight & Sound).’ — tiff
Excerpt
Straub-Huillet working on ‘Class Relations’
________________
The Death of Empedocles (1987)
‘Noted modernist German filmmakers Daniele Huillet and Jean-Marie Straub are behind this evocative minimalist retelling of the tragic story of Empedocles, a Greek philosopher and statesman who lived in the fourth century BC. To prove himself a god and therefore, immortal, Empedocles hurled himself into the burning caldera of Mount Etna and survived. There are four slightly different versions of the film available.’ — worlds cinema.org
Excerpt
the entire film
______________
Sicilia! (1999)
‘A dude (credited as “the son” but I believe named Silvestro) talks with an orange seller about meals. A man on the train complains about the poor. Yelling, always yelling! Everyone is yelling. He’s on a trip, stops to have conversations with people he meets (appropriately, this is based on a book called Conversations in Sicily) which sound like recitations. It wasn’t until I rewatched some scenes from this within Pedro Costa’s documentary on the making of the film that I appreciated the recitations, their strange cadence – the first time I was just reading the subtitles, following the conversation, but apparently there’s more to it than the words being spoken. More on the fate of Sicilians, and some over-my-head philosophy. The sound sometimes disappears.’ — deeperintomovies.net
Excerpt
Excerpt
_________________
Une visite au Louvre (2004)
‘Une visite au Louvre begins with a long panning shot along the bank of the Seine, then moves on inside to examine works by Ingres, Veronese, Giorgione, David, Delacroix, Tintoretto and Courbet. The soundtrack consists of a text by the poet Joachim Gasquet, which evokes comments attributed to Cézanne. His words are spoken in a deliberately artificial manner by Julie Koltaï. The imaginary Cézanne is gruff, quarrelsome and inspiringly meticulous as he comments on his colleagues’ paintings. He attacks the period painters, and purposefully takes sides with the modernists, whose work is characterized by their realist power of expression, light and use of colour.’ — argosarts.org
the entire film
_________________
Quei Loro Incontri (2006)
‘“It’s come too soon for our death —too late for our life”. The statement which Danièle Huillet (1936) and Jean-Marie Straub (1933) gave the day after they were honoured at the youngest film festival of Venice for “innovation in the cinematographic language”, still resounds, albeit even more bitterly: on 9th October 2006 Danièle Huillet came to her end. Their most recent film Quei loro incontri (‘Those Encounters of Theirs’) has turned into a worthy testament, through which a number of the basic elements from their lifework resound: the references to the philosophical materialismo of Marx and Engels, the visual asceticism, the use of direct sound and the adoption of existing work.This film, like Dalla Nube Alla Resistenza (‘From the Clouds to the Resistance’, 979), is based on Dialoghi con Leucò (‘Dialogues with Leuco’) by the Italian author Cesare Pavese. In five chapters two characters are presented, reciting philosophical conversations from the book.’ — collaged
the entire film
Documentary about the film
_______________
Communists (2014)
‘”[…] and also, indeed more, perhaps in those who were in no way exceptional and have left no trace, there was something that went beyond the struggle against Nazism, something – be it only for a moment, the last one – that contributed, whether they knew it or not, to the “dream of a thing” which men have had “for so long,” to the enormous dream of men.” These words of Franco Fortini, spoken in Danièle Huillet and Jean-Marie Straub’s Fortini/Cani (1978), are a kind of summation of one of the major themes of their work. From one film to the next, they return to this “dream of a thing”: the day Camille dreams of in Eyes Do Not Want to Close At all Times (1969) when “Rome will allow herself to choose in her turn,” human’s desire to commune with the gods in From the Cloud to the Resistance (1979), the “new duties, higher duties, other duties” the Gran Lombardo desires in Sicilia ! (1998) and the village the characters try to re-build that winter in Workers, Peasants (2001)—“this reunion of people could become the best thing or also the worst thing.” Every major character in a Straub-Huillet film is a wild, crazy dreamer. This is no less true of Kommunisten (2014), Jean-Marie Straub’s newest feature, comprised of 6 sections, one shot recently and 5 selected from earlier Straub-Huillet films. It is a matter here not of Kommunismus (Communism), of something abstract, of an—ism—it is never so in Straub-Huillet’s work as Tag Gallagher has argued.* Kommunisten, then—the word translates as communists—which is to say, living and breathing men and women. Even in the most cinetract-like of their films, it is always a question of men and women doing specific things, acting in concrete, material circumstances: Arnold Schoenberg’s letters to Wassily Kandinsky in Introduction to Arnold Schoenberg’s Musical Accompaniment to a Cinematic Scene (1972) or the electric power that killed the two boys in Europa 2005 – 27 October (2006) or the philosophers hiding in in their beds in Joachim Gatti: variation of light (2009) while the “women of the markets” are the ones who stop people from slitting each others throats. Their greatest film, Workers, Peasants (2001), has nearly an entire reel (the 6th) in which the characters, primarily the Widow Biliotti, recite a recipe for ricotta cheese and discuss the best wood to burn for cooking it. The Communists of the Kommunisten’s title, then, are not political philosophers but characters, wonderfully brought to life by Straub-Huillet’s brilliant cast of actors, who work day by day to try to realize or reach “the enormous dream of men” even if it kills them (Empedocles, Antigone). No theoretical, waxing poetic, no prescriptive politics, but tangible discussions of imprisonment, survival, sex, work and relationships.’ — Ted Fendt, MUBI
the entire film
_________________
Jean-Marie Straub La Guerre d’Algérie! (2014)
‘Splinter from a text by Jean Sandretto, A shot fired by Straub before Kommunisten.’ — MUBI
the entire film
________________
Jean-Marie Straub Où en êtes-vous, Jean-Marie Straub? (2016)
‘Small commissioned film from the Center Pompidou. It’s an anecdotal film which must not have required much effort from Straub, but ultimately it’s one of his simplest films and that’s not a shame. So four shots, including one failure (the first): two cats getting into each other’s throats and letting the camera roll on an empty armchair; then a cat washing itself on the same armchair; then a woman brushing a cat on a bed; then our Jean-Marie himself, on the same bed, making eyes at a cat. It’s almost a simplified version of his cinema, but without the difficult texts and immobile actors. There, he appears almost happy, versed in the simple observation of the world.’ — shangols
the entire film
______________
Jean-Marie Straub France Against Robots (2020)
‘The same single-shot scene—a man walking on a lakeshore reading a gloomy dissident text by Georges Bernanos about the “fatal evolution toward the dictatorship of money, race, class, or the nation”—recurs twice: once shot at twilight, once in the morning, in Straub’s final completed film.’ — Metrograph
the entire film
*
p.s. Hey. ** Misanthrope, Hi. Hm, not sure why you couldn’t see all the pix, dude. When all other ideas fail, sheet ghost. It’s got everything going for it. You can’t lose. Happy that David’s trajectory continues in an upward direction. When are you hitting up the haunt? ** _Black_Acrylic, Holly Willoughby was one of the ‘who’s that?’ for me. Now I know. Thanks for the tip on Nondi_’s ‘Flood City Trax’, Definitely intrigued. ** Jack Skelley, Jack-in-the-Box. How many times have you heard that one? A mag-gasm with kids! I’m trying to think of a better situation, can’t. Ah, good old Matias. I would send love in return if he could vibe it. Wow, KA’s writing desk plus Jason McBride. Plus, you, I assume. Mega-Kathy-gasm. Lurve ya! ** Sypha, Oh, broken images for you too. Maybe it’s a United States thing. Hm. I’m of the opinion that Madonna looks a lot better than she did six months ago. Yeah, I think 15 is when I was forced to give up my trick-or-treating ways and just go out on Halloween with vandalising intentions. ** Dominik, Hi!!! It’s kind of impossible to walk past the chestnut guy without feeling sad. Well, thousands of people do or seem to do that every day, I guess. Chris Colfer is officially your ‘date’ for last night. Oh, gosh I don’t know. I think my favorites would be the most horrible ones that weren’t racist. Marc Jacobs as a female bodybuilder was pretty horrifying. Ha ha, nice one: Homer into Harry. Hot! Love reminding me to buy my ticket for this weekend’s annual and always very highly anticipated Salon du Chocolat today, G. ** Gee, Hi, Gee! How’s it, pal? I’ve been busy as hell and mostly good. Oh, you’ve must’ve met Adem. Yeah, he’s great. Very cool. Knows everything there is to know about Samuel Beckett. I think horrifying and deeply unsettling is an apt description of yesterday’s post. It’s going to take me months to depollute this place. How’s everything with you – writing, life, entertainment, love … the whole shebang? xoxo. ** Matthew Doyle, Mr. Doyle! Welcome, sir. It was very LA, wasn’t it? That’s comforting to think. I was going to ask what Arroyofest is, but I’ll find out with my own fingertips. It was great seeing you too. And, yes, return. It awaits y’all. Oh, man, I’m just so sad to miss Knotts Scary Farm this year, it’s painful. So, pix would be helpful. Awesome to see you, bud! ** Steve Erickson, My parties are a safe space apparently. ‘Fairyland’ preceded ‘Priscilla’. I’m guessing there just hasn’t been any luck finding a distributor for it. ** Audrey, Hey Audrey. I don’t have many close friends here in Paris either. But the solitude is good for productivity, at least. I’m an eternal optimist, as you can probably tell. Yes, send me the link when the short is polished. That would be terrific! Thanks, I’ll start with ‘Wallsocket’. I’ll try to dig into it today if I can. ‘Marie Antoinette’, makes sense. It’s kind of a too obvious choice, but I think I still like ‘Lost in Translation’ most. Well, yes, the colonist period. I guess at least it’s so extremely strange and uncharacteristic that he did that. I’m so happy you like ‘A Season in Hell’. It’s major, I think, and, yeah, no doubt in the world that I was heavily influenced by it. Wonderful. Where do you live? I think you said, but I’m spacing out, apologies. Have the best day! Love, me. ** Okay. There was a Straub-Huillet retrospective here in Paris recently at the Cinematheque, and I guess that’s what inspired me to restore my Day about their great work. Please enjoy in whatever sense you like. See you tomorrow.
“Les Yeux ne velent pas en tout temps se fermer ou peut-etre qu’un jour Rome se permettra de choisir a son tor” is my favorite of theirs
Dennis, Yeah, can’t see most of them today either. And have tried different browsers. Oh, well, no biggie. I do have some BIOS update waiting in the wings but I kinda don’t want to do it bc those things can brick your computer. I did one before not knowing the risks and it worked out, but when I talked to computer-expert friends, they were like, WTF, why did you do that? Never do a BIOS update! Ugh.
For some reason, this kid’s sheet ghost is just really great. It’s hard to explain. I guess it’s the simplicity bc so many other people go over the top (which is fine, of course).
So far, so good with David. He got all his car stuff taken care of yesterday: front- and rear-end alignment, three new tires, washed it and vacuumed it. He’s set. Just needs to get an oil change, which he’ll do next time he gets paid.
I’ve not heard anything about the haunt since my friends and I initially talked about it. They said they’re all in. Now, half of them are sick. Who knows what they’ll do? Or not do. :'(
Hi!!
There were quite a few cringe costumes at yesterday’s party, right? The female bodybuilder, yes, definitely! And Channing Tatum’s Winnie the Pooh, haha. If we’re staying with the funny-horrible ones, which I think we should (I mean, Shaun White, for example…?)
Oh, my god! Salon du Chocolat = Heaven on Earth. I don’t even want to imagine how much money I’d spend… (I do want to imagine all the wonders I’d taste, though.) Did you buy your ticket?
Love ending my misery and letting me find a fucking winter coat because, for whatever reason, it seems to be an impossible quest, Od.
Hi The stills from the films look very intriguing. What films do you feel I should watch first??
I found boxes with old CDs and go through them. They are so many. I should pull my discmans out to play them. I found first Alizée album Gourmandises but it’s her fourth album Une enfant du siècle I like the most, it must be somewhere near…
Maybe it’s good idea to photograph the CDs like portal pics, some of them that feel like portals
Good vibe from Crete
Oh the last time I mentioned giouvarlakia to you, it is not meat free. So you maybe going to pass. Now I am eating pastitsio. I did it amazing but it is also not meat free. I will mention you in future times meat free ones we have so many amazing recipes Greek
Feeling inspired and hopeful for the future Send good thoughts for everything to go well
I’m happy that the films of Straub-Huillet exist in the world and I find their interviews interesting. My DVD rental company does actually stock something by them, which is a surprise. Chronicle of Anna Magdalena Bach with English subs, maybe I’ll give it a try.
Hi Dennis – We are busy… I’m working on a bunch of commercial shoots. Hopefully the strike situation will get resolved soon. Friday we are going to see Nick Cave and Saturday we are seeing a John Waters double feature of Cecil B. Demented and Dirty Shame at the Academy. We are trying to shoehorn some haunts into our weekend schedule. José and I are also looking to do a quick trip to NYC the week after Thanksgiving. He’s never been there and I’m interested in seeing the, X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X, opera at The Met and since we’ve been on a Sondheim kick in 2023, Merrily We Roll Along is currently on Broadway with Daniel Radcliffe. Also, there’s big retrospective of Ed Ruscha at MoMA. Shooting for ‘Stroke’ is continuing and I’m learning sooo much about 1980s gay porn from Christopher. The doc I’m working on, California Sober, is in post and should be wrapped by the end of November. Zine sales are brisk, our DC zine is back in stock on Printed Matter https://www.printedmatter.org/catalog/63570/ We are also investigating bringing our zines to the Paris Ass Book Fair in June 2024.
Does Madonna look better now? I’ll have to look her up some recent pictures, the last time I saw a picture of her (at some music award show or whatever) she looked godawful. Actually, though, I’m less concerned with how she looks and really just wish she could go back to coming out with decent music, which it feels like she hasn’t done in ages now.
dennis – loved the costumes yesterday. and i’m not familiar with any straub-huillet stuff, but you’ve definitely got me interested. any personal faves i should be checking out? i definitely have a hungry heart – growing up was lonely and isolated, and i think that ruined (or at least complicated) me in a lot of ways. cecil pics coming your way november 1st x
I agree that yesterday was one of your blog’s bleakest days, especially the celebs cosplaying heroin addiction.
For Slant Magazine, I reviewed Poppy’s ZIG: https://www.slantmagazine.com/music/poppy-zig-album-review/
Grasshopper Film’s website/app projectr.tv is streaming the entire Straub/Huillet catalogue. (FORTINI/CANI, ANTIGONE & THE DEATH OF EMPEDOCLES have long been on my watchlist.)
Hello, haha I’m laughing at the idea of you “depolluting” your blog. Dennis, surely, you can ask the slaves to do this for you? They’ll be here soon, not long left until the end of the month… I’m so glad to hear you’ve been well. I’m okay, just been slightly depressed if I’m honest. I’m working on a short story collection, a poetry collection, and a novel, but somehow not making any progress on any of them… I feel drained most of the time, I’m only teaching one class this term and have really nice students, but I still feel overworked. My brother’s currently away and that always has a bad effect on me. The highlight of these days is studying Marguerite Duras with our lovely French tutor. Also, Justin and I are organising a Neo-Dacadence Xmas event and I’m really excited about it. Johannes Göransson will come and read, too. I wrote my own Neo-Decadence manifesto last night, which felt energising. Are you working on a new book or still filming? Do you have any plans for Halloween? I’m tempted to turn myself into a witch with black lips. 💋💋💋
Hey Dennis – Nice to see this Straub/Huillet day. You have any particular faves among the later films Straub did solo? There’s a number of those I haven’t seen yet.
How’s the final edit of your film progressing? Is it mostly finessing at this point or are there any larger decisions that are still in play?
Last few days have been a whirlwind. Banging promo drum for Harry Smith films next week and dealing with technical issues in showing them. Saw surgeon and looks like intensive surgery is in my future, maybe late December. Did some recording with Julian Calendar.
Oh, have you seen new Wes Anderson shorts based on Roald Dahl stories? Some new stylist moves for him. Reminded me a bit of shift Rohmer made from his typical films to Perceval. Suspect you’d dig them. XO
Hello from Tokyo! I’m not following some of the discussions here due to time and travel (was on tour), but I have been having trouble downloading your images from your blog for a while now. And using my computer in Tokyo, I still have that problem. The phone is no problem. So maybe it’s a browser issue on my part, or… I’m not that computer literate. Only know how to turn it on, and go to a page. And great blog today.
OK, now the images are coming through. It’s a time-related issue. My computer needs the time to download your images. And your blog has a lot of images, so I think it just takes time to fully function.
Hi Friend!!
Its me!
I just finished a really ugly painting and for some reason I thought of you as I was drawing. I don’t mean that because it was ugly, just that my mind was wondering and it happened to wonder to you.
Ugly painting are necessary because I think it really diminished these ugly feelings. Kind of. I think it looks ok, there’s a secret, that I used my blood mixed into the pain, but nobody will know, haha. (Im kidding) you think someone has done that before? Ofc probably, but I cant remember the painting.
I think ive settled that I might move to Massachusetts. It has a really good art scene and I might pursuer mortuary school or art history so I can be a curator or museum worker. I am really intelligent when it comes to history but in real life I’m so retarded when it comes to things. I just wish I wasnt 18 yet I used to be on top of things but now im just behind.
Weird question but what is ur rent and what is the limit for u?
How has your October been so far?
It’s Coming to an end and so does my Halloween job (r.i.p) Hey, so when (if) i send you that picture you wanted me to draw, would you want me to throw in something bought from the Spirit store? A memento? I wont mind. I have a discount.
I might apply to a bookstore after Spirit. I just wish I could regurgitate all my organs out and die.
Arre you a fan of croutons? Whoever says they are only made for salads is a moron.
Yum.
Hi Dennis,
I love Straub/Huillet! Once I’ve seen more of their movies I think they’ll probably rank among my favorite filmmakers. Few films are so densely packed, both thematically and formally. I’m glad you’ve adapted to Paris and are still productive. I am also an eternal optimist, no matter how hard the world tries to convince we otherwise. Without hope, what do we have? I’ll make sure to send you a link whenever I finish the short film up. I’d love to hear your thoughts on Wallsocket whenever you get to it, I hope you enjoy it! I don’t like Lost in Translation as much as others do, but I definitely see the appeal. It’s certainly a beautiful movie and I think it’s one of the few interesting perspectives on age gap relationships. The colonist period is certainly strange haha. It came completely out of left field as I was reading his biography. I would’ve loved if he had made more poetry, but oh well. Speaking of which I finished A Season in Hell, but I think I’ll have to re-read it from a more analytic perspective. I kept on getting so swept up in the sheer beauty of the language I didn’t end up engaging with it on the thematic level I wanted. It’s such a fantastic poem, and I can’t wait to study it further. I don’t think I’ve mentioned it here before, but I live in Washington state.
I’ve been feeling a little better today since I had a wonderful conversation with some of my online friends for many hours last night. It’s been a while since I had been on the same wavelength with people, and we had a great talk about film, art, life, etc. On a more depressing note, a different online friend is currently seriously considering suicide. This is the second friend I’ve had to intensely worry about within a month. I do my best to talk to them and make sure they know they are wanted on this earth but I often worry it’s not enough or that I’ll say the wrong thing. It makes me very sad to see people I care about in pain, and I wish I take some of that burden from them. Apologizes if this is too morbid, I have a hard time telling when I’m oversharing so just let me know if I overstep my bounds. Anyways, I wish you continued good luck on your film. How’s that going anyways?
Much Love,
Audrey