Jacques Rivette(1928-2016)
- Director
- Writer
- Actor
Although François Truffaut has written
that the New Wave began "thanks to Rivette," the films of this
masterful French director are not well known. Rivette, like his
"Cahiers du Cinéma" colleagues Truffaut,
Jean-Luc Godard,
Claude Chabrol and
Éric Rohmer, did graduate to filmmaking but,
like Rohmer, was something of a late bloomer as a director. He made two
shorts (At the Four Corners (1949)
and The Quadrille (1950), starring
Jean-Luc Godard); in the mid-1950s he
served as an assistant to Jean Renoir and
Jacques Becker; and in 1958 he was, along
with Chabrol, the first of the five to begin production on a
feature-length film. Without the financial benefit of a producer,
Rivette took to the streets with his friends, a 16mm camera, and film
stock purchased on borrowed money. It was only, however, after the
commercial success of Truffaut's
The 400 Blows (1959),
Resnais'
Hiroshima Mon Amour (1959)
and Godard's
Breathless (1960) that
the resulting film, the elusive, intellectual, and somewhat lengthy
(135 minutes)
Paris Belongs to Us (1961),
saw its release in 1960. In retrospect, Rivette's debut sketched out
the path which all his subsequent films would follow; PARIS NOUS
APPARTIENT was a monumental undertaking for the critic-turned-director,
with some 30 actors (including Chabrol, Godard and
Jacques Demy), almost as many locations,
and an impenetrably labyrinthine narrative. His next film, the
considerably more commercial
The Nun (1966), was an
adaptation of the Diderot novel which Rivette had staged in 1963. The
least characteristic of all his features, it was also his first and
only commercial success, becoming a succèss de scandal when the
government blocked its release for a year. Rivette's true talents first
made themselves visible during the fruitful period, 1968-74. During
this time he directed the 4-hour
Mad Love (1969), the now legendary
13-hour
Out 1 (1971)
(made for French TV in 1970 but never broadcast; edited to a 4-hour
feature and retitled
Out 1: Spectre (1972)), and the
3-hour
Celine and Julie Go Boating (1974),
his most entertaining and widely seen picture. In these three films,
Rivette began to construct what has come to be called his "House of
Fiction"--an enigmatic filmmaking style influenced by the work of
Louis Feuillade and involving
improvisation, ellipsis and considerable narrative experimentation.
Unfortunately, Rivette seems to have no place in contemporary cinema.
On the one hand, his work is considered too inaccessible for theatrical
distribution; on the other, although his revolutionary theories have
influenced figures such as
Jean-Marie Straub &
Danièle Huillet and
Chantal Akerman, he is deemed too
commercial to be accepted by the underground cinema; he still employs a
narrative and uses "name" actors such as
Jean-Pierre Léaud,
Juliet Berto,
Anna Karina and
Maria Schneider. Since CÉLINE
AND JULIE, Rivette's career has been as mysterious as one of his plots.
In 1976 he received an offer to make a series of four films, "Les
Filles du Feu."
Duelle (1976),
the first entry, received such negative response that the second,
Noroît (1976)--which some critics call his
greatest picture--was held from release. The final two installments
(one of which was due to star Leslie Caron
and Albert Finney) were never filmed. The
1980s proved no kinder. He made five films, but only one of them,
Love on the Ground (1984),
opened in the US (it received disastrous reviews). Although he
continues to be an innovative and challenging artist, Rivette has
failed to find the type of audience that has contributed to the
commercial success of his New Wave compatriots.