Elsa la rose (1966)
By Agnès Varda
Elsa la rose (1965 France 20 mins) Prod Co: Pathé Dir: Agnès Varda Phot: Willy Kurant, William Lubtchansky Ed: Jean Hamon Sound: Bernard Ortion, Jacques Bonpunt “Cast”: Elsa Triolet, Louis Aragon, Michel Piccoli (voice: poems) Elsa la rose Adrian Danks Senses of Cinema In 1965, Agnès Varda made a short, intense documentary on the then almost 40-year relationship between the French writers Louis Aragon and Elsa Triolet. Her film predominantly and characteristically focuses upon Triolet, and her role as both muse and important artistic and political influence on her partner. Varda’s film, Elsa la rose, titled after the moniker bestowed on Triolet by Aragon, was made between two of Varda’s most controversial, inscrutable and misunderstood features: Le Bonheur (1964) and Les Creatures (1965). All three films focus on the couple and the complex relation it holds to both its immediate environment and circumstances and the realms of individual and collective fantasy. This gaze on the couple as a sacrosanct and malleable entity, a measurable and unknowable partnership, a shared and totally separate consciousness, as well as the impact and influence of landscape and place on daily existe…
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