The Inner Scar/La cicatrice interieure (1972)
DVD5 | ~58 min | MPEG2 720x576 PAL 16:9 ~5500 kbps avg | 3.97 GB
audio: French | Dolby AC3 2 ch ~256 Kbps | Don't need translate
Drama, Fantasy, Music, Art-house
audio: French | Dolby AC3 2 ch ~256 Kbps | Don't need translate
Drama, Fantasy, Music, Art-house
This is a highly experimental French film consisting of no more than 23 camera shots, total. It resembles nothing so much as one of Warhol's earlier films, except that it is more episodic. Nico of the Velvet Underground portrays a different woman in each of the episodes. The first three concern her "rescues" from Death Valley, Egypt and Iceland by a young man to whom she eventually says "stay away from me." Following that, she recites from various texts in German, French and English, makes various gnomic observations and encounters various men in various guises. All the men are played either by director Philippe Garrel or Pierre Clementi.
"La Cicatrice interieure est un chef-d'oeuvre. Un chef-d'oeuvre total.Je ne sais pas l'expliquer… Tout a coup, c'est toute l'Humanite, toute la Terre qui parle - la Terre sans le sens antique de Mere. Mais ce n'est meme pas la Terre qui parle, c'est l'Humus… C'est incroyable, tout y est."
La Cicatrice interieure may very well be the most arresting avant-garde film I have ever seen. I've encountered many great ones before, including Michael Snow's Wavelength (1967), Chantal Akerman's Jeanne Dielman (1975), and many of Brakhage's films, but never something that made me so aware (and, by turns, happy) that I was watching a film.
The other two Garrels I've seen, 1968's La revelateur and 2005's Regular Lovers, each have their own poetic essence, with the latter possibly being my favorite of his. But there's something altogether unnerving about a film like La Cicatrice interieure, whose 60-minute length seems to encompass so much.
In essence, the film is like Satantango (1994), Gerry (2002), and the Brown Bunny (2003) in its portrayal of space and time, but Garrel's work (a tremendous influence on all these films) is more gorgeous and hypnotic, perhaps because of how completely it embraces the, I don't want to say pretension, but materialism of a landscape film.
Knowing very little about the film before watching it, I was shocked to see Nico in it. As it turns out, she was one of Garrel's major collaborators in the stage of his career immediately following La Cicatrice interieure. Not only is she the emotional driving force of the film–delivering a performance that is both captivating and frightening–but her enigmatic and utterly amazing songs adorn the photography of the film.
In as much as can be reduced (though I don't really want to spend a lot of time breaking this film down), La Cicatrice interieure seems to be a work about life. Garrel approaches the subject from an elemental point of view, shooting his film in long takes of people walking, without any deceitful editing. The viewer sits there, calm, fully aware of what's to happen in the next few minutes, with little to no surprises coming. This, to some, may seem like a harsh way to spend an hour, but it's really quite exciting and calming. Garrel is exploring what is beyond our physical experience, but the irony is how he does it in the most material and aesthetically-restricted form.
If the screams Nico howls in this film mean anything (and I'm not sure that they do), it has to do with something close to Garrel's title, a scar, an inner trouble. This, Garrel suggests, is what keeps us human, whether we like it or not.
Without a doubt, La Cicatrice interieure is an unforgettable experience.
Director: Philippe Garrel
Stars: Nico, Philippe Garrel and Ari Boulogne
Production land: France
Premiere Date: 2 February 1972 France
IMDb - 7.0 (190 votes)
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