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Les Cratures

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Wikipedia article




'Les Cratures' is a 1966 fantasy drama film written and directed by Agns Varda that recounts a story of a couple who have just moved to a new town and been in a car accident. The wife, Mylne Piccoli, loses her voice in the accident and communicates through writing. The husband, Edgar Piccoli, is a science fiction writer working to produce his next book.

'Les Cratures' was an official selection of the 27th Venice International Film Festival, though it received mixed reviews."Les Cratures." Cin-Tamaris. Cin-Tamaris. Web. 4 Nov. 2015. http://www.cine-tamaris.fr/films/les-creatures The film failed commercially.Agns Varda L'le Et Elle." Agns Varda L'le Et Elle. June 18-October 8, 2006 Exhibition Press Kitground floor (2006): n. pag. Foundation Cartier Pour L'Art Contemporain. Web. 27 Oct. 2015. http://presse.fondation.cartier.com/wp-content/files_mf/presse_fichier_543.pdf.

Varda later recycled the leftover film stock from the film as the basis for her 'Ma Cabane de l'chec' ('My Shack of Failure'). 'Ma Cabane' was made from film stock directly from the distribution copy and rearranged to form the structure of a cabin.

Plot



'Les Cratures' opens with Mylne and Edgar Piccoli driving down an empty road. Mylne expresses concern over how quickly Edgar is driving, but he refuses to slow down. Edgar defends his driving speed, stating that when he goes fast, his ideas also go fast. He describes how happy the two will be while living in a seaside house and going on long walks. Mylne agrees with Edgar, but asks him once more to slow down. Edgar does not, and shortly thereafter crashes into a tree.

We see that Edgar has survived the crash and is passing time watching the tide come in as he stands on an elevated platform located on an isolated beach. A man drives past and offers Edgar a ride, saying that he will have to wait eight hours to leave otherwise. Edgar passes the ride up and instead watches the tide from the platform.

Edgar is seen beginning to write a book in scenes that are interspersed with his travels around his new town. In these travels, he passes by a house with a stone tower on property that is marked "off limits." There is a solitary figure standing atop the tower, though the two do not interact. Edgar visits a store run by a woman and her daughter. Once Edgar leaves, the daughter remarks that he scared her, but the mother defends him, describing him as quiet but polite. While Edgar is in the outdoor market, Max and Pierre, two linen vendors, take particular note of him



As Edgar drives home, Max and Pierre, who have blocked the road, stop him. The two proceed to fake a fight, and when Edgar intervenes, they cover him with a sheet rigged to rip. When it does, Max and Pierre insist that Edgar pays 50 francs for it. In the following scene, the vendors are seen talking to the shopkeeper and explaining that they feel something is amiss with Edgar.

Max and Pierre then harass Edgar at his home, while he is attempting to enjoy time with his pregnant wife Mylne, who has been rendered mute by the wreck. Edgar is able to drive the two off, but the next time he leaves the house, he finds a pile of sheets next to a dead cat.

He tries to find the owner of the dead cat, but it's not the shopkeeper's. He tries the local hotel, where he is accused of killing the cat. The film turns red, he accuses the hotel cook of killing the cat, as they serve cat when they're out of rabbit. He then beats those who accused him of killing the cat with its corpse. The manager of the hotel comes out to intervene and reassure Edgar that her cat is still alive. When Edgar goes to bury the cat, he discovers a strange metallic disc attached to it.

It is revealed that everything strange and out of the ordinary that has been transpiring recently is actually a story that Edgar is writing told through his eyes, though it is unclear exactly where the fiction of Edgar's story begins and the reality of his life as a writer ends. Edgar explains that a man who is more of an evil spirit than any kind of man or animal can control others through a remote device, though the batteries only last one hour. In Edgar's story, those who are being controlled are forced into actions that ruin their personal relationships. Each of the characters in Edgar's story are the residents of the town in which he and Mylne currently reside.

In his story Edgar becomes suspicious of his neighbor in the tower marked as off limits: Mr. Ducasse. Edgar enlists the linen vendors' help to break into Mr. Ducasse's house and investigate. Once inside, Edgar confronts Mr. Ducasse and forces him to explain the events that have been happening. Mr. Ducasse demonstrates that he can control people remotely, and does so by forcing one of the vendors, Pierre, to nearly jump out of a nearby window. At this point, Pierre decides he has seen enough and leaves. Mr. Ducasse tells Edgar that he will give him all the answers that he wants as long as Edgar can best him in a game that resembles a twisted version of chess. Edgar agrees to this plan.

In the game, miniature versions of the residents of the town are placed on a chessboard and driven to interact with one another. A nearby monitor displays a video of all the interactions the residents are having. Edgar must keep the relationships between the characters healthy while Mr. Ducasse attempts to drive them apart by controlling their minds for one minute at a time, during which time the screen turns red. The game proceeds with some relationships surviving and others breaking apart.

Edgar has seen enough, however, when Mr. Ducasse attempts to have the old man who owns the local hotel rape the shopkeeper's daughter, Suzon. Edgar proceeds to smash all the equipment and fight Mr. Ducasse. The fight proceeds to the top of the tower in the house, where Edgar forces Mr. Ducasse off the ledge to his death.

Thus ends the fictional story that Edgar has been writing. When Edgar next goes to town in an effort to call the local doctor to help Mylne through labor, though, he finds out that the real Mr. Ducasse had committed suicide by jumping from his tower's balcony and dying in the same manner as in Edgar's story.

Throughout the film, the line between what is fictional and what is really occurring to Edgar Piccoli is blurred. One is never quite sure when the film has stopped following Edgar the writer and begun following Edgar the subject of the novel. One thing that does become clear by the end of the film is that the metal discs are used to control the minds of the residents in the town, which is indicated by the film turning red. In these particular instances, the viewer knows that the scenes being watched are part of the novel, and not Piccoli's life as a writer.

Cast



* Catherine Deneuve as Mylne

* Michel Piccoli as Edgar Piccoli

* Eva Dahlbeck as Michele Quellec

* Marie-France Mignal as Vivane Quellec

* Britta Pettersson as Lucie de Montyon

* Ursula Kubler as Vamp

* Jeanne Allard as Henriete

* Jolle Gozzi as Suzon

* Bernard La Jarrige as Doctor Desteau

* Lucien Bodard as Monsieur Ducasse

* Pierre Danny as Max Picot

* Louis Falavigna as Pierre Roland

* Nino Castelnuovo as Jean Modet

Production



According to Varda, she made 'Les Cratures' in an attempt to show the messy nature of inspiration. She wanted to convey the way in which inspiration can come from all sorts of directions: the people one knows, the environment, and so on. All of these inspirational sources combine to create their own disorder, and one must recognize that disorder before it can be turned into a story. The disorder isn't going to arrange itself.

'Les Cratures' cast features Catherine Deneuve and Michel Piccoli in the leads. It was directed by Varda, and shot in Noirmoutier between 1 September and 15 October 1965. Claude Pignot designed the sets, with editing by Janine Verneau, music by Pierre Barbaud, and mixing by Jacques Maumont. Produced by Parc Films-Mag Bodard, 'Les Cratures' was distributed by Cin-Tamaris. The film is dedicated to Jacques Demy.

Critical reception



'Les Cratures' received very mixed reviews upon its premier. Michel Cournot of Le Nouvel Observateur went so far as to call 'Les Cratures' "a monster." Jean Narboni of Cahiers du Cinma felt that Agns Varda had thrown herself into a void with the film.Narboni, Jean. Cahiers du Cinma. Volume 183. Oct. 1966. Excerpt in Varda Par Agnes. Varda, Agnes. "Les Cratures." Paris: Cahiers Du Cinema, 1994. 243. Print. Henry Chapier of Combat felt that Varda should be given a pass because "what author doesn't have the right to be wrong at least once."Henry Chapier. Combat. Aug. 30, 1966. Excerpt in Varda Par Agnes. Varda, Agnes. "Les Cratures." Paris: Cahiers Du Cinema, 1994. 243. Print.

Other contemporary critics disagreed, with Pierre Mazars of 'Le Figaro Littraire' saying that 'Les Cratures' is presented with speed, humor and happiness, and that it shows the audience the birth of literary works through sleep and dreams.Pierre Mazars. Le Figaro Littraire Sept. 1, 1966. Excerpt in Varda Par Agnes. Varda, Agnes. "Les Cratures." Paris: Cahiers Du Cinema, 1994. 243. Print. Samuel Lachize from 'L'Humanit' treads the line between the two schools of thought, acknowledging that 'Les Cratures' isn't Varda's best film, and it doesn't belong to any known genre, yet still inspires thought as it is a "troubling and curious film."Samuel Lachize. L'Humanit, Sept. 9, 1966. Excerpt in Varda Par Agnes. Varda, Agnes. "Les Cratures." Paris: Cahiers Du Cinema, 1994. 243. Print.

While contemporary critics were somewhat baffled by the film, U.S. critics have since received 'Les Cratures' favorably. Roger Ebert gave it three stars out of four, calling it a "complex and nearly hypnotic study of the way fact is made into fiction."Ebert, Roger. "Les Creatures Movie Review & Film Summary (1969) | Roger Ebert." Roger Ebert. 14 Nov. 1969. Web. 4 Nov. 2015.http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/les-creatures-1969 He said the film is a comparison between how we shape our lives and how a writer crafts his novel. "Our past is factual, but our future is flexible." Roger Greenspun of 'The New York Times' lauded Varda for her efforts, but made the statement, "though cooking a stew with heavy ingredients, she produced mostly froth, and a little steam."Greenspun, Roger. Movies. New York Times, 10 Dec. 1969. Web. 4 Nov. 2015. https://www.nytimes.com/1969/12/10/archives/screen-subplots-abound-in-vardas-les-creatures.html Greenspun wrote that he hated the film upon his first viewing, but now realizes that the film is so beautiful that its faults should be forgiven for all the small favors. James Travers from filmsdefrance.com praises 'Les Cratures' ability to fit in to the French Nouvelle Vague while maintaining feminist overtones, setting it apart from the rest of the movement.Travers, James. "Les Creatures (1966)." Films De France. 2011. Web. 4 Nov. 2015. http://www.filmsdefrance.com/film-review/Les_Creatures_1966.html

'Ma Cabane de l'chec'



Agns Varda recycled her failed film into a successful installation piece, Ma Cabane de l'chec, or My Shack of Failure.[http://fondation.cartier.com/#/en/art-contemporain/26/exhibitions/294/all-the-exhibitions/627/agnes-varda-l-ile-et-elle/ Ma Cabane de l'chec] The shacks made from recycled materials on the island of Noirmoutier, on which 'Les Cratures' was filmed, inspired Varda's shack. To Varda, this is a "shack of a recycled movie." The shack was later renamed to 'La Cabane du Cinma', or 'The Shack of Cinema'.Luc Vancheri. Les cabanes d'Agnes Varda: de "l'echec" au "cinema". Campanotto. Les cabanes de Varda: de l'echec au cinema, Jul 2010, Paris, France. Campanotto. n. pag. https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-00597943/document

This shack was a reinterpretation of cinema and an effort to revive 'Les Cratures' and solidify its existence. Cabane also raised questions about perception of film in a plastic form versus a projected form. Varda claims that cinema is "light coming from somewhere captured by images more or less dark or colorful." To Varda, the shack itself is cinema, and when she is in the shack itself, "it feels like [she] live[s] in cinema."'Les Plages D'Agns'. Dir. Agne Varda. Seville/E1 Entertainment, 2010. DVD.

Art critic Luc Vancheri concurs and continues, questioning how a series of segments from a film reel in the shape of a shack manages to maintain both the film itself, and projected cinema at the same time. He argues that since light is passing through the physical celluloid of the film stock, the film is still being projected and revealing its hidden images. The viewer of the shack has the choice of examining the images themselves, or the light that is being refracted and filtered through the celluloid.

References




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