Agnès' Strände (2008)
48KAgnès’ Strände: Directed by Agnès Varda. With Agnès Varda, André Lubrano, Blaise Fournier, Vincent Fournier. Agnès Varda explores her memories, mostly chronologically, with photographs, film clips, interviews, reenactments, and droll, playful contemporary scenes of her narrating her story.
“Autobiographies can be the worst or the best of things. Either a boring exercise in conceit and self-absorption or a fascinating self-exploration by a person of value.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eWell, the Agnes of u0026#39;Les plages du0026#39;Agnèsu0026#39; being Agnès Varda there is no need to worry. She undoubtedly belongs to the second category.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eIt goes without saying that to fully appreciate this wonderful film you have to be a minimum acquainted with Vardau0026#39;s oeuvre. But a minimum is enough, for it does not take long before the lady starts captivating you, not by boasting about all the masterpieces she made, but by creating a new kind of story-telling right before your eyes.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eOne thing I am pretty sure of is that there is no other film, autobiographical or not, that looks like u0026quot;Les plages du0026#39;Agnèsu0026quot;.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eOf course there is no question that Vardau0026#39;s life is rich and worth telling: she worked for and with great artists, she was married to one of the most original French directors ever (Jacques Demy), she covered the fledgling Chinese and Cuban revolutions, fought in favor of feminism when it was not yet fashionable to do so. The real issue for the director was in fact to find HOW to talk about herself. Well after viewing u0026quot;Les Plages du0026#39;Agnèsu0026quot;, I can tell her (and I am far from being the only one to think so): u0026quot;You did it brilliantly, Agnèsu0026quot;.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eIndeed Agnès Varda is not content to go through the motions of the standard autobiographical movie: talking face to the camera or in voice over, interviewing witnesses of her life and illustrating her words with significant clips. She does that of course but she knows how to enrich the material through a lot original finds: the mirrors on the beaches,her walking backwards to show she goes back in time, the circus artists on the beach, recreating her Cine Tamaris production office on a fake beach in Rue Daguerre, her sailing a boat from Sete to Paris as an allegory of the evolution of her career, etc. etc. Agnès Varda never rests on her laurels throughout. Quite the contrary: she creates, invents, tries out new things sequence after sequence. In the film she calls herself u0026#39;une petite vieilleu0026#39; (a short old lady) but I suspect she says so out of vanity because she does not look old at all. Actually, she has retained all the freshness, all the spontaneity of the young lady she once was. u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eDonu0026#39;t refrain from seeing this film even if it does not appeal to you in the first place. When the end credits roll you will probably – just like I did – utter with a sigh: u0026quot;Is it already the end?u0026quot;”