One thing missing from these year polls is a bit of general historical background to help us appreciate the films better. What makes the year different from other years? What was happening around the world? What were people thinking? Knowing these goes a long way toward understanding the year's movies. I can't promise to take responsibility for adding some historical context to each month's poll, but if anyone's interested maybe I'll try.twodeadmagpies wrote: ↑Tue Apr 13, 2021 9:11 pmi guess everyone has already seen lumière d'été. well i hadn't. and that was dumb, cuz this movie was made for me like nothing else in 43 (so far) i ♥ his silent movies, but aside from remorques hadn't had much luck with the sound ones, but he crams everything into this. (when he cut from her to a giant tussock of grass, i was howling, there is much that is not rote in this film)
1943 is obviously in the midst of World War II, but of course it has its own particular flavor compared to adjacent years. By now the war had been dragging on and escalating, which sometimes weakened morale, hence all the overt and subtle propaganda everywhere. The tide had already turned in the Pacific, but there was lots of bitter fighting ahead on all fronts, and D-Day wouldn't happen until the next year. At this point it probably looked like the war could go either way.
While the Allies were gaining confidence, occupied countries like France were gradually losing hope. French films of 1941 and 1942 were bold enough to mock the German invaders (in ways the censors wouldn't notice) and to hope for a quick victory - but by 1943 they turned inward, and later that year (esp. in Douce and Voyage Without Hope) they turned to despair.
Released on the 26th of May, Lumière d'été is a prime example of the inward-looking French films of early 1943. Except for an unseen eagle it doesn't allude directly to Nazis. Instead, its three settings and three male characters represent different sides of France:
- The hotel is the bourgeoisie, who accommodated the German invaders as a matter of convenience
- The castle is the aristocracy and its ideological heirs, who embraced fascism willingly
- The construction site is the proletariat, who favored unions and communism and generally supported the Resistance
My favorite metaphor in Lumière d'été is the dam, a totally apprpriate image for the Resistance, whose goal was to stop Germany the way a dam stops a river. Like a war zone, the dam site is filled with heavy equipment and explosions.
If you imagine that Michèle is France, then her 3 suitors are like the different sides of French society trying to win the French people:
- Roland is an artist, the intellectual class that was so respected before the war, but now he's working for the aristocracy and betraying his ideals. At the masked ball he dresses as Hamlet, the most famously indecisive character in literature. Like so many French intellectuals during WWII he's basically a flip-flopper.
- Patrice is the patriciate, the haughty conservative class who felt nostalgic for royalty. Like a wanna-be Nazi he's fond of rifles and riding uniforms, and he has horrible taste in art, declaring Roland's idea to paint the castle all white "a masterpiece".
- Julien is the working class, and of course he's the romantic hero who earns Michèle's love, as the movie believes the Resistance will win the hearts of France as a whole.
There's still a lot more to unpack. A cloud formation in the opening shots forms a patriotic picture of France, shaped like the country's north & west coats jutting into the sky. Cri-Cri is Coco Chanel, who famously fraternized with Nazis (her wealth was comparable back then to people like Bezos and Gates, so she's not a trivial figure for the French).