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Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles

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Wikipedia article




'Jeanne Dielman, 23, quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles', more commonly known simply as 'Jeanne Dielman' (, "Jeanne Dielman, 23 Commerce Quay, 1080 Brussels") is a 1975 drama film by Belgian filmmaker Chantal Akerman. It is a slice of life portrayal of the life of a housewife.

Upon its release, critic Louis Marcorelles called it the "first masterpiece of the feminine in the history of the cinema". It has become a cult classic and was the 19th-greatest film of the 20th century in a critics poll conducted by 'The Village Voice'. In 2012, the film ranked 35th on critic's poll in Sight & Sound magazine's 100 greatest films of all time list.

Plot



The film examines a single mother's regimented schedule of cooking, cleaning and mothering over three days. The mother, Jeanne Dielman (whose name is only derived from the title and from a letter she reads to her son), has sex with male clients in her house each afternoon, for her and her son's subsistence. Like her other activities, Jeanne's sex work is part of the routine she performs every day by rote and is uneventful. But on the second and third day, Jeanne's routine begins to unravel subtly, as she overcooks the potatoes that she's preparing for dinner, and drops a newly washed spoon. These alterations to Jeanne's existence prepare for the climax on the third day.

Cast



* Delphine Seyrig as Jeanne Dielman

* Jan Decorte as Sylvain Dielman

* Henri Storck as the first client

* Jacques Doniol-Valcroze as the second client

* Yves Bical as the third client

Production



After establishing herself as a major film director in 1974 with 'Je, tu, il, elle', Akerman said that she "felt ready to make a feature with more money" and applied for a grant from the Belgian government for financial support, submitting a script that Jane Clarke described as portraying "a rigorous regimen [constructed] around food ... and routine bought sex in the afternoon". This script would only be the rough basis for 'Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles' because after Akerman received the government grant of $120,000 and began production, she threw the script out and began a new film instead. Akerman also explained that she was able to make a female-centric film because "at that point everybody was talking about women" and that it was "the right time".

Shooting 'Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles' took five weeks and Akerman called it "a love film for my mother. It gives recognition to that kind of woman". Akerman used an all female crew for the film, which she later said "didn't work that well - not because they were women but because I didn't choose them. It was enough just to be a woman to work on my film ... so the shooting was awful". Akerman further stated that "a hierarchy of images" that places a car accident or a kiss "higher in the hierarchy than washing up ... And it's not by accident, but relates to the place of woman in the social hierarchy ... Woman's work comes out of oppression and whatever comes out of oppression is more interesting. You have to be definite. You have to 'be'".

The film depicts the life of Jeanne Dielman in real time, which Akerman said "was the only way to shoot the film - to avoid cutting the action in a hundred places, to look carefully and to be respectful. The framing was meant to respect her space, her, and her gestures within it". The long static shots ensure that the viewer "always knows where I am."

Reception



'Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles' premiered at the Directors Fortnight at the 1975 Cannes Film Festival and was financially successful in Europe. Writer Peter Handke and filmmaker Alain Tanner have cited it as influential on their work. It was not released in the United States until 1983.

Film critic John Coleman said that "the film's time span covers Tuesday (stew and potatoes), Wednesday (wiener schnitzel) and heady Thursday (meat loaf and Jeanne has an orgasm and kills her client with a pair of scissors). This orgasm bit is bound to strike the serious-minded as an unfortunate bow of crass commercialism". Jonathan Rosenbaum defended the film and said that it "needs its running time, for its subject is an epic one, and the overall sweep ... trains one to recognize and respond to fluctuations and nuances. If a radical cinema is something that goes to the roots of experience, this is at the very least a film that shows where and how some of these roots are buried". Critic Gary Indiana said that "Akerman's brilliance is her ability to keep the viewer fascinated by everything normally left out of movies".

Ivone Marguilies observed that the film was "fully in tune" with the European women's movement of the time, and that feminist critics welcomed its "rigorous alignment of sexual/gender politics with a formal economyshowing cooking and hiding sex... as an impressive alternative to well-intentioned but conventional political documentaries and features." B. Ruby Rich said that "never before was the materiality of woman's time in the home rendered so viscerally ... She invents a new language capable of transmitting truths previously unspoken". Marsha Kinder called it "the best feature that I have ever seen made by a woman". Akerman was reluctant to be seen as a feminist filmmaker, stating that "I don't think woman's cinema exists". Film director Gus Van Sant named 'Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles' an inspiration for his own similar films 'Gerry' (2002) and 'Elephant' (2003).

The film garnered a cult following, and was subject to many tributes by film buffs, including even spoofs and parodic versions. With the release of the DVD edition by the Criterion Collection in 2009, the company held a contest that invited fans to create cooking videos inspired by the film, and to post them on YouTube.

References




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