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Gang of Four[La Bande des quatre]
“I love coincidences — and inventing them.”
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By now I’m not disturbed by Rivette’s sort of stream-of-conscious narrative, following a thread only as long as it interests him, and resolving nothing by the closing credits (careful not to speak of a “conclusion” — his texts are open-ended). Somehow, the questions raised are less interesting here, less the kind one would like to work out for oneself later and more the kind one expects the film itself to answer, such as the revelation that comes two-thirds into the film, never to be revisited, that Anne is searching for a sister who disappeared years ago.
Perhaps that’s just it: in life, things are not wrapped up so easily, and their theater instructor Constance’s guidance to “trust the poetry” has no real value; life does not follow the neat rules of Aristotelian drama. And indeed that may be the point; throughout most of the film, their mentor is only seen from one angle, and only in front of a stage. Real life has a way of breaking into what the girls know of her world, too, when she becomes absorbed in Cécile’s troubles. This is never quite explained, as the viewer knows no more than the students do, but it clearly changes their lives irrevocably, the moment fact engulfs fiction in a way they are not prepared for. Well? I am talking myself into more of an appreciation of this film and suppose I’d better give it some more consideration. I should say: I liked it thoroughly on my first look, and perhaps there’s more substance there than a first look can reveal.
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1988 France Dir Jacques Rivette Cast Bulle Ogier, Laurence Côte, Benoît Régent, Fejria Deliba








