The Reckless Moment

This is another movie from the Hazel Flagg collection.

What a sleazeball! Great casting.

This moves along at a breakneck pace!

I’ve seen very few movies by Ophüls… The Earrings of Madame De…? Yes. Possibly no other movies?

It’s just so well put together! Not a second wasted.

That’s the kind of lighting you should have in your hall.

It makes going out at night much more dramatic. Gotta get a single one of those two thousand watt light bulbs for my hall.

What a sleazebag! I hope he dies!

She’s great. What’s her name? Is that Joan Bennett from the poster?

It goes on an on — like, four movies per year until the 50. Extremely busy career. It’s not a name I’ve really paid attention to.

Apparently Joan Bennett was thirteen years old when she had her daughter.

(The Hollywood thing of having women in their thirties playing mothers and women in their twenties playing teenagers is particularly weird when the two things run smack into each other.)

It’s whatsisname! James Mason!

There’s so much going on in this movie.

The movie is basically about Mason blackmailing Bennett — but are they gonna hook up instead? I have absolutely no idea where this movie is going.

Heh, that kid has one of those hats that Jughead has? They were apparently a thing…

Do you think that kind of hat and veil thing will ever get back into fashion? I suspect that it never actually was a thing — it was a convention in movies only?

Wow, and now there’s a moral dilemma!

This movie is fantastic. So unexpected — it seems like it could easily have been a standard noir, but instead it’s denser than a neutron star — not a second wasted. And it doesn’t go anywhere where you expect it to go, even when you know that it’s not going to know where it’s going to go.

Great performances and so well filmed.

The Reckless Moment. Max Ophüls. 1949.

Baxter, Vera Baxter

I’m so confused right now… I’ve seen this movie before, but wasn’t it in black and white? Er…

No! I’m thinking of Nathalie Granger, which also has Depardieu, but Jeanne Mureau and not Delphine Seyrig. D’oh.

This one has a kick-ass soundtrack by Carlos d’Alessio, just like India Song.

OK, I’d forgotten that the soundtrack is basically just the one song that’s looped over and over again? At least it’s been going for half an hour now.

This song. Which is great, but… an odd choice!

I remember liking this movie more than I do this time around. The problem is, I think, that neither of the actors who have spent most time on the screen — Noëlle Châtelet and Claudine Gabay — are delivering thrilling performances.

And the text… it seems so much less thought through than India Song, for instance. It’s more realistic, and more trivial.

Man, that’s some fireplace.

Heh, Delphine Seyrig’s character is called L’inconnue. OK, now it makes more sense that she’s not in any shots with other actors… I thought it was just because she’d been filmed on a day where nobody else were present. Didn’t even have time to take her coat off…

Which, I guess, may still be true.

*gasp* She’s in the frame with somebody else!

The movie is “about” renting this house — and it’s an exquisitely ugly house. Salmon-coloured wall-to-wall carpeting and these monstrous leather chairs… Those huge windows along with the blown-out shots… I think I understand why it is this way, but it’s sure not easy on the eyes.

Which would have helped with this dialogue.

Oh, the music is diegetic, as the kids say. The music is coming from an (ambulatory?) party? So it grows and ebbs in volume, but is always present.

Uhm… I like the movie — I mean, the general feel of the movie. But it doesn’t quite work? It’s basically a conversation, and what they’re talking about seems so trivial. My mind kept wandering… perhaps it’s a totes fascinating movie if I were concentrating more?

But no, I don’t think the movie really works.

Baxter, Vera Baxter. Marguerite Duras. 1977.

India Song

This is probably the movie I’ve watched the most times… and now there’s a 2K restoration from Criterion, so now I’m watching it again.

I usually type these things while I’m watching the movies, whenever I’m bored or something, but once again, I was so enthralled by this movie that I watched the entire thing without typing a single thing, so I’m writing this after the fact.

These are very day-for-nightish day-for-night shots, eh?

Some directors, like Chantal Akerman, has had a real rediscovery thing going on over the past few years. Even Claire Denis, I guess, although she’s still doing movies — her films have also gotten more attention. Marguerite Duras’ movies? Not really, but it’s good that this movie (and Baxter, Very Baxter) have at least been restored.

The last time I watched this was on a very grainy DVD — and this restoration is very nicely done, but is a lot less gritty than it used to be.

I guess one of the attractions of this movie is that we’re watching people, and then on the soundtrack we’re mostly listening to people gossiping about the people we’re watching.

The other major selling point is the soundtrack.

India Song (Thème, piano)

That’s like such a fantastic song. It seems like one of those songs that have always existed, like an Erik Satie tune…

India Song - Richard Jobson

Oh, if you want to know the plot of this film, you can just listen to this Richard Jobson track from The Fruit of the Original Sin. I had the album when I was like fourteen, so I’d listened to the story dozens and dozens of times before I saw the movie for the first time.

My only problem with this movie is the casting of the French vice-consul (from Lahore). I mean, he’s supposed to be a tragic nerd, but still… couldn’t they have found a better actor!?

I mean, just look at the way he holds his cigarette! That’s awful!

I should get more mirrors for my living room.

That’s what I want my apartment to look like!

Anyway, fantastic movie. I loved it even more this time around, possibly.

India Song . Marguerite Duras. 1975.