alr

La Jetée

Directed by Chris Marker

In the Mood for Love

Directed by Wong Kar-wai
Screening on Film
  • La Jetée

    Directed by Chris Marker.
    France, 1962, 16mm, black & white, 28 min.
    French with English subtitles.
    Print source: HFA

"Nothing tells memories from ordinary moments,” La Jetée's narrator observes, “Only afterwards do they claim remembrance on account of their scars.” A film told almost entirely with still black-and-white images, Chris Marker’s photo journal/sci-fi mini-epic retains only the scars—exploring whether the human being is the author or the victim of memory. For Marker, art seems to be the realization of memory. His post-apocalyptic Möbian riddle ponders the contradictions of art and representation, even questioning its own photojournalistic form in a post-WWII world in which global events are understood through media, itself subject to censorship by those trying to control history—manifested via the scientists who fling Marker’s protagonist in a rescue mission back and forth across time. The destruction of humanity in the film's fictional WWIII has obliterated both the timely and timeless qualities of the human experience, the antithesis to the artist's responsibility. Ironically now secure in the cinematic canon, Marker’s existential tale is one in which those who pursue the bliss of eternal virtues are those who feel the mortal erosion of time the most– Gunnar Sizemore

  • In the Mood for Love (Fa yeung nin wah)

    Directed by Wong Kar-wai.
    With Maggie Cheung, Tony Leung Chiu-wai, Siu Ping-lam.
    Hong Kong/France, 2000, 35mm, color, 98 min.
    Cantonese and Shanghainese with English subtitles.
    Print source: Janus Films

Given that Wong Kar-wai's sixth film sprouted from Liu Yichang's short story Intersection, it is fitting that the film situates itself at the stylistic crossroads of his career. Building on a Cassavetes-inspired filmmaking approach that relied on a rough outline and heavy improvisation, Wong chose here to ditch his often-frenzied camerawork—an approach aided by his signature cinematographer Christopher Doyle leaving mid-way through. The style of replacement Mark Lee Ping-bin—longtime Hou Hsiao-hsien DP—contrasted with Doyle’s kinetic handheld camera; Doyle shot many of Wong's most famous sequences at a slower shutter speed to achieve the impasto effect of the protagonists somehow outrunning time, smearing elusively across each frame, whereas Lee’s sensibilities rest more in control, employing little if any camera movement to create a melancholic awareness of time’s constant, irrecuperable passing. Born from this clash of visual philosophy was an electrifying union of bold style and immense restraint—mirroring the relationship of Chow Mo-wan and Su Li-zhen, who conspire in rooms of sensual deep reds and golds yet fail to act on or even verbalize their taboo feelings, remaining locked in respective charade-marriages. Out of this tension and onto the screen bursts Wong’s exquisite vision of timeless romance hampered by fickle circumstance. – Gunnar Sizemore

Part of film series

Read more

Harvard Undergraduate Cinematheque

Current and upcoming film series

Read more

The Reincarnations of Delphine Seyrig

Read more

Rosine Mbakam, 2025 McMillan-Stewart Fellow

Read more

The Illusory Tableaux of Georges Méliès

Read more

Activism and Post-Activism. Korean Documentary Cinema, 1981-2022

Read more

Fables of the Reconstruction. Nelson Carlo de Los Santos Arias

Read more

Ben Rivers, Back to the Land

Read more

Make Way for Tomorrow. Carson Lund’s Eephus