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Despite creating works that have equally pleased
and frustrated differing viewers, Claire Denis can now count herself as one of the most
highly touted female filmmakers in cinematic history alongside compatriots Chantal Akerman
and Agnes Varda. In a recent poll on
women directors by Australian film journal Senses of Cinema, these three French
women rank alongside Maya Deren as the top four. Failing
to make movies that please everyone does not keep one from being canonized--just look at
Jean-Luc Godard. Denis latest, Friday
Night, will likely divvy up opinion as much as previous works like Trouble Every Day, Beau Travail, and Nenette et Boni.
Based on a novel by Emmanuelle Bernheim, Friday Night is about
the romantic encounter between two strangers over the course of a single evening. The movie opens with a series of sumptuous shots
focusing on Parisian rooftops. (Funny how
Paris few skyscrapers never seem to appear in the movies.) Laure (comedian and actress Valerie Lemercier), a
seemingly ordinary woman in every way, is about to move in with lover Francois. After an exhausting day of packing, she bathes and
readies herself for a dinner with friends. Once
in her car, she suddenly realizes that due to a public transit strike, she is trapped in a
traffic jam the likes of which have only been seen in movies like Weekend and Songs from the Second Floor.
Laure passes the time looking at other ensnared cars and drivers, lets
her mind wander, and turns up the music in her car to drown out the horns blaring outside. Suddenly, Jean (Vincent Lindon) hops into her car
asking for a ride. Not knowing what to think,
Laure acquiesces to her handsome new passenger. Together,
they engage in an almost silent feeling out of the others intentions. After some misunderstandings and confusion, Laure
unexpectedly finds herself unable to let Jean just disappear into the night, at which
point their spontaneous fling begins.
Friday Night is less a narrative than a mood piece. There is little action, and the film has its
occasional bouts with languor. Still, watching
its carefully crafted textures, there is a growing awareness that the movie does not
reveal an objective reality but is out to capture this one womans very subjective
experience. Denis displays a masterful
control of tone. When Laure steps outside,
the feeling of night the cooler air, the shimmering light, the slight wariness, the
greater feeling of isolation comes across with a vividness few movies rival. (Extra thanks must go to Denis regular
cinematographer, the extraordinary Agnes Goddard.)
Denis also exposes Laures state
of mind with insight and humor. Whenever
Laure spies a beautiful woman within Jeans striking distance, her mind suddenly
reels with an irrational jealousy everyone has felt before.
For Laure, this is represented by some absurd daydream (think a subtler Ally
McBeal). It is all about her
projections, her insecurities. All of it is
enhanced by a prominent soundtrack composed of car engine hums and pinball machine rings
as well as Benjamin Brittens Suite
on English Folk Tunes, Dimitri Shostakovichs Chamber
Symphony in C minor, and original music by the Tindersticks Dickon
Hinchliffe, the latter a frequent collaborator. Friday
Night will probably be too low-keyed and deliberately paced for some, but its
rewards are ample for the patient and attentive.
- George Wu