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Reviews
STAR RATINGS EXPLAINED
Unmissable 5 Stars
Excellent 4 Stars
Good 3 Stars
Poor 2 Stars
Tragic 1 Star

FILM DETAILS
Certificate
PG
Cast
Eddie Constantine
Anna Karina
Akim Tamiroff.
Directors
Jean-Luc Godard.
Screenwriters
Jean-Luc Godard.
Running Time
98 minutes

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Alphaville
A secret agent travels through different dimensions to rescue his girlfriend.


Plot
Private eye Lemmy Caution is dispatched to a sinister futuristic metropolis to liberate its enslaved citizens by destroying the controlling Alpha 60 computer.

Review

Borrowing a character from Peter Cheyney's cult novels, Jean-Luc Godard has cross-generic fun throughout this dark political allegory, as he blends lowbrow pulp with intellectual paranoia and hypocrisy. Sci-fi, comic books, hard-boiled paperbacks, B movies and serials are all referenced as Godard turns Eddie Constantine into a Bogartesque anti-hero who operates in a supposedly futuristic city that can only be reached through intersidereal space.
    But, in fact, it can be accessed by crossing a bridge, as Alphaville is none other than contemporary Paris, which is given the soulless feel of a distant dystopia by cinematographer Raoul Coutard's inspired use of its bleak modernist architecture and nocturnal illumination.
    Godard shrewdly anticipates the omniscience of computers and the dehumanisation of a near-robotic humanity through such Orwellian strategies as the suppression of art, love, thought and individuality. But his concerns lie more in the present than the future.
    The Nazi Occupation was still a recent memory in the 1960s and Godard suggests that a nation that had already succumbed to one totalitarian regime was predisposed towards accepting another with equal meekness, especially as it had so readily come to trust science and technology as forces for good. Thus, it's no accident that the nefarious mastermind is called Von Braun or that he's a boffin (in keeping with Dr Strangelove's satirical demonisation of academic megalomania). What's more disturbing is the fact that the residents all bear tattooed numbers and that Godard filmed in the Gestapo's Parisian headquarters, the Hotel Continental. It's sinisterly ironic, therefore, that the picture won the Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival.

     For all its populism, the action is also packed with learned allusions to Cocteau, Kafka and the myths of Eurydice and Lot's wife. Such is Godard's genius that these highbrow references never overwhelm the pulp and that the disposable is prevented from trivialising the valuable - unlike in Alphaville or, unfortunately, our own dumbed-down times.


Verdict
Although this is drastically different compared to the rest of Godard's oeuvre, it has without a doubt had a lasting impact with its ground-breaking visuals, which although have not proved accurate are still stunning now. The plot is also a great retelling of the old Greek myth.


Reviewed by David Parkinson

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Alphaville

Science fiction from Jean-Luc Godard, and it's brilliant. By today's standards, the story seems quite conventional; A secret agent from 'the Outlands' (Eddie Constantine) is sent to the city of Alphaville in the future to free it's citizens who are all under the control of the Alpha 60 computer. It's a simple plot, but this is Godard, so it becomes so much more than that. The people living in Alphaville are all living under a strict regime and always being watched, ranging from what they are al... More

Empire User Rating

Posted by Coyleone at 02:34, 28 November 2012 | Report This Post



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