Jeanne Dielman, 23, quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles
Nothing Happens:
Chantal
Akerman’s Hyperrealist Everyday
By Ivone Margulies.
Published by Duke
University Press Books.
Published 1996.
ISBN-10: 0822317230
ISBN-13: 9780822317234
Description:
Through films that
alternate between containment, order, and symmetry on the one hand, and
obsession, explosiveness, and a lack of control on the other, Chantal Akerman
has gained a reputation as one of the most significant filmmakers working
today. Her 1975 film Jeanne Dielman, 23 Quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles
is widely regarded as the most important feminist film of that decade. In
Nothing Happens, Ivone Margulies presents the first comprehensive study of this
influential avant-garde Belgian filmmaker.
Margulies grounds her
critical analysis in detailed discussions of Akerman’s work – from Saute ma
ville, a 13-minute black-and-white film made in 1968, through Jeanne
Dielman and Je tu il elle to the present. Focusing on the real-time
representation of a woman’s everyday experience in Jeanne Dielman,
Margulies brings the history of social and progressive realism and the
filmmaker’s work into perspective. Pursuing two different but related lines of
inquiry, she investigates an interest in the everyday that stretches from
postwar neorealist cinema to the feminist rewriting of women’s history in the
seventies. She then shows how Akerman’s “corporeal cinema” is informed by both
American experiments with performance and duration and the layering present in
works by European modernists Bresson, Rohmer, and Dreyer. This analysis revises
the tired opposition between realism and modernism in the cinema, defines
Akerman’s minimal-hyperrealist aesthetics in contrast to Godard’s
anti-illusionism, and reveals the inadequacies of popular characterizations of
Akerman’s films as either simply modernist or feminist.
An essential book for
students of Chantal Akerman’s work, Nothing Happens will also interest
international film critics and scholars, filmmakers, art historians, and all
readers concerned with feminist film theory.
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