NEW YORK, NY.- Cinephiles of a certain age have a Jean-Luc Godard film that when first seen, blew their minds. Mine was Godards low-budget foray into dystopian science fiction, Alphaville.
Having opened the 1965 New York Film Festival, which called it the first successful incursion of pop art into the cinema, Alphaville returns in a restored, re-subtitled print at the IFC Center, starting Friday.
Call it pop art, meta-noir, sci-fi neorealism or the underground precursor to the overblown, effects-driven superhero movies of the 21st century. Alphaville inserted itself into popular cinema by appropriating an existing movie icon the hard-boiled detective Lemmy Caution, played in seven French thrillers by frog-faced American actor Eddie Constantine.
Thanks to Constantine, Alphaville is remarkably close to a normal movie (by Godardian standards). And thanks to Godard, Lemmy one icon among many lives in a self-aware movie universe. My own eureka moment came when, dispatched to find the German pulp character Harry Dickson (Akim Tamiroff), Lemmy asks him if their colleagues Dick Tracy and Flash Gordon are dead.
Alphaville is pure pop in the form of gritty vérité shot on high-speed, black-and-white film almost entirely at night and largely in the then-new Paris business district La Défense. As outrageously callous and bluntly stylized as a comic strip, mayhem is accentuated by Paul Misrakis start-stop, hyper-melodramatic score, while tough-guy Lemmy quotes Paul Éluard.
Inventive and pragmatic, Godard transformed ordinary objects into futuristic gizmos: That a jukebox stands for a spy console, a cigarette lighter receives radio transmissions, an electric fan denotes the supercomputer Alpha 60 and the computers flat, guttural croak is that of a man with a prosthetic voice box, is a form of surrealism.
Godard was pragmatic in other ways, too. Richard Brodys biography, Everything Is Cinema, suggests that Alphaville was designed to get Anna Karina, who divorced the director just before filming began, to say the words I love you. She does at the end of the film. Audiences did not. Present at the movies premiere, Village Voice critic Andrew Sarris felt waves of hatred washing up on the screen.
New York Times critic Bosley Crowther, also there, noted that Godards excessively cinematic prank provoked annoyance when, shifting gears midway through, it became a tedious tussle with intellectual banalities. Perhaps, but to paraphrase Umberto Ecos essay on cult films and Casablanca, where two clichés make us laugh, a hundred clichés make a myth in this case Orpheus and Eurydice. (In Alphaville, Cocteaus version is referred to throughout.)
Like 1984 and any number of recent opinion pieces, Alphaville equates totalitarianism with the debasement of language and allegiance to the algorithm. That it makes its points audio-visually may be why many artists prized the film. The conceptualist Mel Bochner celebrated Alphaville with a photo-text grid published in 1968 in Arts Magazine. Decades later, MoMA PS1 hosted a show of contemporary art inspired by Godard called Postcards From Alphaville.
Those artworks have dated but the film hasnt. Digitally restored, Alphaville not only looks but feels brand-new. The intellectual banalities that bored Crowther are so insistently contemporary that Alphaville could have been made in 2023. If by some time-traveling Borgesian twist of fate it were, Godards film would have been my candidate for the years best.
Alphaville: Opens Friday at the IFC Center in Manhattan; ifccenter.com.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.