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Providence (1977 film)

Providence is a 1977 French/Swiss film directed by Alain Resnais from a screenplay by David Mercer. It explores the processes of creativity through a portrayal of an ageing novelist, played by John Gielgud, who imagines scenes for his latest novel which draw upon his past and his relationships with members of his family. The film won the 1978 César Award for Best Film.

Providence
Directed byAlain Resnais
Written byDavid Mercer
StarringDirk Bogarde
Ellen Burstyn
John Gielgud
David Warner
Elaine Stritch
CinematographyRicardo Aronovich
Edited byAlbert Jurgenson
Music byMiklós Rózsa
Release dates
  • 25 January 1977 (1977-01-25) (USA)
  • 9 February 1977 (1977-02-09) (France)
Running time
110 minutes
CountriesFrance
Switzerland
LanguagesEnglish
French

Plot edit

On the eve of his 78th birthday, the ailing, alcoholic writer Clive Langham spends a painful and sleepless night mentally composing and recomposing scenes for a novel in which characters based on his own family are shaped by his fantasies and memories, alongside his caustic commentary on their behaviour. His son Claude appears as a cold and unforgiving prosecuting lawyer, who revels in spiteful repartee. His second (illegitimate) son Kevin features as an idealistic soldier accused of the mercy-killing of an old man who was being hunted down. Claude's wife Sonia shows sympathy with Kevin and seems eager to seduce him in protest at her husband's callousness. Clive also invents the character of Helen, as Claude's mistress, but she bears the features of Clive's dead wife Molly who committed suicide. Clive's imagination is also haunted by scenes of an autopsy on the corpse of an old man, a military round-up of elderly people who are detained in a sports stadium, and a dark tangled forest in which a hunted man metamorphoses into a werewolf. Before Clive loses consciousness, it is Kevin whom he sees as the werewolf in the forest; Claude shoots Kevin but seems to identify him with their father.

On the following day, Clive welcomes Claude, Sonia and Kevin (in reality an astrophysicist) for an idyllic birthday lunch in the sunlit garden of his country mansion, and their relationships are characterised by mutual affection and good humour, albeit with signs of self-restraint in deference to the occasion. After lunch, in what he seems to envisage as a final parting, Clive unexpectedly asks them all to leave without a word.

Cast edit

Production edit

The producer Klaus Hellwig suggested to Resnais that he should make a film with the British playwright David Mercer. The two men met in London and, overcoming the obstacle that neither of them spoke the language of the other fluently, they began a series of discussions of drafts and redraftings which extended over a year. Mercer's original idea concerned the situation of political prisoners held in a sports stadium, symbolising a world in collapse. Gradually the outline shifted to the imagination of an aging writer seeking the material for a novel. Resnais proposed making the whole film into a metaphor of creation and disintegration; he also made extensive alterations to the chronology of the scenes as written by Mercer.[2]

The title of the film was also supplied by the producer, signifying both the name of the estate where the ageing novelist lives and also the controlling hand with which he arranges the fate of his characters. The name evoked further associations with the American city of Providence, the home of the fantasy writer H. P. Lovecraft whose gothic stories inspired some of the imagery in the film.[3]

The original intention was to shoot the film in the United States in New England but for reasons of cost this became impracticable. Certain exterior scenes were filmed in Providence and in Albany in the US, while others were done in Brussels, Antwerp, and Louvain; these were used in conjunction with each other to form a composite cityscape for the background of certain scenes. Studio scenes were filmed in Paris. The final birthday party sequence was shot on location at the château de Montméry at Ambazac near Limoges. Filming took place between April and June 1976.[4][5]

The set designs were created by Jacques Saulnier, a regular collaborator with Resnais, and he won a César award for his work. In order to create a funereal atmosphere, grey and dark shades predominated in the design and strong colours were excluded. Saulnier recalled that Resnais made him read Lovecraft in order to imbue Langham's house with the presence of death: "I imagined it like a family tomb". In some scenes (created in Clive Langham's imagination) the layout of a set changes between one shot and another (for instance, the door in the corner of a room in one shot appears at the bottom of a flight of stairs in another; a conversation between four characters alone in one scene continues in the midst of a party in the next). Some settings use a painted backdrop which has a deliberately theatrical appearance; one of them portrays a seascape in which artificial waves surge up among the painted rocks (achieved by blowing bursts of polystyrene foam pieces from beneath the set).[6][7][8][9]

Providence was Resnais's first film in English, and a prestigious cast of British and American actors was engaged despite the restrictions on the budget. Resnais held a longstanding ambition to cast John Gielgud in a substantial film role, having seen him performing on stage, and was encouraged to approach him by Dirk Bogarde.[10][11] Gielgud later described the project as "by far the most exciting film I have ever made", and noted the impressive calmness of Resnais throughout filming which made him "wonderful to work with". He also recalled the contribution made by Florence Malraux, Resnais's wife, who spoke fluent English and helped overcome the director's limitations in that respect.[1] Resnais attached great importance to the interplay of vocal timbres of his principal actors, and he described how he thought of them as a Schubertian quintet: Ellen Burstyn a violin, Dirk Bogarde a piano, David Warner a viola, John Gielgud a cello, and Elaine Stritch a double bass.[12]

The original intention had been to make the film in French, translating it from the English. Resnais however soon felt that it would not work in French: "I could hear it so clearly in English and anyway, Mercer's writing depended on the English inflection." The producers agreed, but insisted that there should also be a French version."[13] The process of dubbing the completed work into French was undertaken with particular care: the voice actors included Claude Dauphin as Clive, François Périer as Claude, Gérard Depardieu as Kevin, Nelly Borgeaud as Sonia, and Suzanne Flon as Helen.

For the music Resnais turned to the Hungarian-born Hollywood composer Miklós Rózsa, whom he had admired especially for his work on the 1949 version of Madame Bovary. Rózsa later cited Resnais as one of the few directors in his experience who really understood the function of music in film. Soundtrack albums were eventually issued on LP and CD.

Themes edit

Resnais described the film as a "macabre divertissement", insisting that he wanted it to be funny despite the darkness of its themes.[14] He also said that one of the questions which the film poses is whether we are the people we think we are or whether we become what others make of us in their judgments.[15]

A central theme is the process of artistic creation: "[Providence] is a meta-film, a film about the making of films, a work of art about the fabricating of art works."[16] Expanding this idea: "The film suggests some symbiotic relation between creator and created script.... The characters are [Clive's] creations, yet he speaks to them as if they were wilful children. Their status is ambiguous since they a composite: they are dream figures, created characters and also individuals who are part of Clive's proximate reality."[17]

In counterpoint with creativity, the theme of death recurs constantly, not so much as a subject in itself but in Clive's struggle to avoid it: Resnais described the film as telling the story of the old writer's determination not to die, and his continual drinking and imagining are the evidence of his refusal to let go.[18] As well as the funereal aspects of the decor and the scenes of autopsy, the repeated instances of metamorphosis of a character into a werewolf is linked to the advent of death, with the implication that the process of dying reduces man to animal.[19] Clive also has an obsession that the young are trying to push him aside, to kill him, which he visualises in the scenes of the stadium/concentration camp where the old are rounded up by soldiers who are all young.[18]

Other motifs which contribute to the mood of morbid anxiety are the military search parties and images of deportation, the helicopter surveillance, the sound of bombs and ambulance sirens, and the demolition of buildings.[20][21]

As several writers about the film have observed, the opening sequence mirrors the beginning of Citizen Kane: the plaque outside the house, the camera closing in on a lighted doorway, the breaking of a glass object, the close-up of the lips of Clive as he curses.[22][23][24] Whereas the personality of Kane is explored through the separate 'versions' of people who knew him, in Providence it is the central figure of Clive who draws the characters of the members of his family and gives a reflection of himself through them.

One of the thoughts on his own style of expression that was written for the character of Clive by David Mercer has been noted by many critics as especially applicable to Resnais himself. Citing a criticism of his own creative work that the pursuit of style has often resulted in a lack of feeling, Clive then argues back that "Style is feeling—in its most elegant and economic expression."[25]

Reception and influence edit

In France the press response to Providence at the time of its release (and again at its re-release in 1983) was overwhelmingly enthusiastic. Many argued that it was a film of great cultural importance, and a highlight in Resnais's career.[26] The film went on to win seven prizes at the César awards, including Best Film and Best Director.[27]

By contrast, reviewers in the United States were predominantly hostile to the film.[28] Vincent Canby in The New York Times called it a "disastrously ill-chosen comedy" and "a lot of fuss and fake feathers about nothing"; he found the script pretentious and the structure complicated without being complex.[29] For John Simon in New York it was an "unmitigated disaster" in which he criticised almost every aspect with the exception of John Gielgud's performance.[30] Pauline Kael wrote a 2000 word review in The New Yorker which found fault with the contradictory structure, the stilted language, the artificiality of the acting, and the glacial directorial style of the film before concluding that all it amounted to was "the pain of a 'clever' English play".[31] A short notice in Variety took a different view, referring to "an unusual visual tour-de-force ... offering dense insights into the flights of imagination of a supposedly dying writer".[32]

In the UK, the film received a more varied reception, and it had a successful box-office run in London.[33] David Robinson writing in The Times was troubled by the quality of the writing: "Resnais's visual creations ... seem very flimsily supported on the frame of David Mercer's script ... the writing, again, is self-conscious, stiffly literary. The dialogue is formal, and artificial ... And the pretensions of the text only increase suspicion that it is not about very much at all."[23] A non-judgmental review in the Monthly Film Bulletin emphasised the many layers of thematic cross-reference both within the film and beyond it, with echoes of other work written by David Mercer and elements from other films as well as the occasional interleaving of European and American landscapes.[24] Gilbert Adair in Sight & Sound contrasted David Mercer's excessively literal script in which "nothing is left unstated" with the extent of the personal mythology and fantasy which Resnais was able to introduce into the film; he found the work enriched by its anti-naturalistic devices such as the gaffes in continuity which emerge in Clive's plotting of his novel and the exchange of voices of the characters, as well as by the disjunctive appearances of a clownish footballer in inappropriate scenes; and despite certain reservations he concluded that "the dream cast perform together superbly".[21] A specific criticism of one aspect of the film appeared in a comment column of the British Medical Journal, where it was argued that the inclusion of scenes of a post-mortem on a corpse (accurate but unsparing) was "undignified and uncivilised and ought to be condemned" because the audience was not prepared for them and they were unnecessary to the plot.[34]

Retrospective evaluations of Providence have generally been more positive than the contemporary ones.[35] In the Oxford History of World Cinema it is described as "a magisterial and deeply moving incursion into the fantasies of a dying man".[36] For the critic Jonathan Rosenbaum, "The superb performances and Miklós Rózsa's sumptuous Hollywood-style score give the film's conceit a moving monumentality and depth, and Resnais' insights into the fiction-making process are mesmerising and beautiful."[37] The artist Tacita Dean cited Providence as her favourite film, saying that "it deals effortlessly with the problems of enacting the fantasies of a writer’s imagination. It mixes places and time within single sequences to create an uncanny sense of dislocation but its brilliance is its leanness – not a single moment of excess."[38]

One of the aspects of the film which has generated most comment and disagreement is the interpretation of the two-part structure and to what extent one of them represents 'deception' and the other 'truth'. For Pauline Kael, the 'imagined' part and the 'real' part contradict each other because either they cannot both be true or else they are not both relevant.[31] Others have found different grounds for criticism, arguing that the final 'real' section represents a compromise and a concession to conventional cinema, a denial of all the bold experimentation of the previous four-fifths of the film.[39] Alain Robbe-Grillet, writer of the screenplay for Resnais's earlier exploration of imagination and recollection, L'Année dernière à Marienbad, was one of those who disapproved of the final section.[40] An alternative view is that the final lyrical section of the birthday party does not present a definitive picture of the family as they really are, but rather another perspective on them in the puzzle which Clive – both as writer and as father – is trying to solve.[24] As one critic has expressed it:

The second part of the film supplements the first by altering its effect, by denying its sometimes hostile paranoid proof but not by eradicating these altogether. The parts of the film open Providence up as a series of reflecting realities which, wound together, may offer something of the hesitance and doubt of mental process. In this sense, Providence may be seen as a precursor to the work of David Lynch in films such as Lost Highway (1997) and Mulholland Drive (2001).[41]

Providence received five top-10 votes (three from critics and two from directors) in the 2012 Sight & Sound polls of the greatest films ever made.[42]

Awards and nominations edit

  • Bodil Awards (Denmark)
    • Won: Best European Film
  • César Awards (France)
    • Won: Best Director (Alain Resnais)
    • Won: Best Editing (Albert Jurgenson)
    • Won: Best Film
    • Won: Best Music (Miklós Rózsa)
    • Won: Best Production Design (Jacques Saulnier)
    • Won: Best Sound (René Magnol and Jacques Maumont)
    • Won: Best Writing (David Mercer)
    • Nominated: Best Cinematography (Ricardo Aronovich)
  • French Syndicate of Cinema Critics (France)
    • Won: Best Film
  • New York Film Critics (USA)
    • Won: Best Actor (John Gielgud)
  • Valladolid Film Festival (Spain)
    • Won: Golden Spike (Alain Resnais)

References edit

  1. ^ a b John Gielgud, An Actor and His Time. London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 1989 (revised edition). pp. 195–198.
  2. ^ "Entretien avec David Mercer", in Robert Benayoun, Alain Resnais: arpenteur de l'imaginaire. Paris: Éditions Ramsay, 2008. pp. 275–277; also p. 159.
  3. ^ "Entretien avec Alain Resnais sur Providence", in Robert Benayoun, Alain Resnais: arpenteur de l'imaginaire. Paris: Éditions Ramsay, 2008. pp. 228; 240–241.
  4. ^ Robert Benayoun, Alain Resnais: arpenteur de l'imaginaire. Paris: Éditions Ramsay, 2008. pp. 238, 299.
  5. ^ Le Populaire, 02/03/2014. Retrieved 10 August 2014.
  6. ^ Jacques Saulnier, in Jean-Luc Douin, Alain Resnais. Paris: Éditions de la Martinière, 2013. pp. 256–257.
  7. ^ Suzanne Liandrat-Guigues, Jean-Louis Leutrat. Alain Resnais, liaisons secrètes, accords vagabonds. Paris: Cahiers du Cinéma, 2006. p. 91.
  8. ^ Jacques Saulnier interviewed in À propos de Providence, film documentary accompanying the DVD of Providence issued by Edition Jupiter in 2013.
  9. ^ Jean Regazzi, Le roman dans le cinéma: retour à Providence. Paris: L'Harmattan, 2010. p. 175.
  10. ^ Suzanne Liandrat-Guigues, Jean-Louis Leutrat. Alain Resnais, liaisons secrètes, accords vagabonds. Paris: Cahiers du Cinéma, 2006. pp. 232–233.
  11. ^ Alain Resnais, in an interview accompanying the DVD of Providence issued by Edition Jupiter in 2013.
  12. ^ "Entretien avec Alain Resnais sur Providence", in Robert Benayoun, Alain Resnais: arpenteur de l'imaginaire. Paris: Éditions Ramsay, 2008. p. 240
  13. ^ Nicholas Wapshott. "Resnais's continuing capacity to surprise" [interview], in The Times, 17 November 1980, p.10: "But later [the producers] came back to us and said that in New York the fact that it would be in English counted against the film. They prefer their European films to be in a foreign language with sub-titles. I suggested that we should send the dubbed French version to New York with English sub-titles."
  14. ^ "Entretien avec Alain Resnais sur Providence", in Robert Benayoun, Alain Resnais: arpenteur de l'imaginaire. Paris: Éditions Ramsay, 2008. p. 236: "j'espère que ce film est drôle car je le vois comme un divertissement, macabre certes et noir, mais un divertissement tout de même".
  15. ^ "Entretien avec Alain Resnais sur Providence", in Robert Benayoun, Alain Resnais: arpenteur de l'imaginaire. Paris: Éditions Ramsay, 2008. p. 228: "L'une des questions que pose le film est, si vous voulez, celle-ci: est-ce que nous sommes ce que nous pensons être, ou est-ce que nous devenons ce que les autres font de nous dans leurs jugements?"
  16. ^ William F. Van Wert. "Meta-film and point of view: Alain Resnais' Providence", in Sight & Sound, Summer 1979, p.179.
  17. ^ Emma Wilson. Alain Resnais. Manchester University Press, 2006. p. 135.
  18. ^ a b "Entretien avec Alain Resnais sur Providence", in Robert Benayoun, Alain Resnais: arpenteur de l'imaginaire. Paris: Éditions Ramsay, 2008. p. 229.
  19. ^ Gerald Weales. Review of Providence, in Film Quarterly, vol.30 (4), Summer 1987, pp. 21–24.
  20. ^ Emma Wilson. Alain Resnais. Manchester University Press, 2006. p. 133.
  21. ^ a b Gilbert Adair, "Providence [review]", in Sight & Sound, March 1977, pp. 120–121.
  22. ^ Jean-Luc Douin, Alain Resnais. Paris: Éditions de la Martinière, 2013. p. 121.
  23. ^ a b David Robinson. "Events of a sleepless night" [review], in The Times, 12 May 1978, p. 9.
  24. ^ a b c Richard Combs, in Monthly Film Bulletin, March 1978. pp. 51–52.
  25. ^ "Entretien avec David Mercer", in Robert Benayoun, Alain Resnais: arpenteur de l'imaginaire. Paris: Éditions Ramsay, 2008. pp. 277–278.
  26. ^ Jean Regazzi, Le roman dans le cinéma: retour à Providence. Paris: L'Harmattan, 2010. pp. 191–192, quotes the following: Robert Chazal, France Soir, 10/2/1977: "du très grand art"; "un chef d'œuvre"; France Nouvelle, 31/1/1977: "un très grand évènement"; Michel Mohrt, Le Figaro, 19/2/1977: "une œuvre maitresse"; La Républicain lorain, 8/2/1977: "Un sommet du cinéma"; Alain Rémond, Télérama, 9/2/1977: "Providence, c'est le Resnais de la grande époque"; Le Quotidien de Paris, 15/2/1977: "Lauriers pour Alain Resnais".
  27. ^ Palmarès: Providence, at l'Académie des Arts et Techniques du Cinéma. Retrieved 17 August 2014.
  28. ^ Obituary of Alain Resnais by Tim Page, in The Washington Post, 3 March 2014. Retrieved 8 August 2014.
  29. ^ Providence: review by Vincent Canby, in The New York Times, 26 January 1977. Retrieved 16 August 2014.
  30. ^ John Simon. "Providence: improvident, imprudent, impossible", New York, 31 Jan 1977. p. 70.
  31. ^ a b Paul Kael, "Werewolf, mon amour", in The New Yorker, 31 January 1977, pp. 70–72.
  32. ^ Review: Providence, in Variety, 31 December 1976. Retrieved 17 August 2014.
  33. ^ Interview with Jonathan Rosenbaum: A Lesson in Modesty: Speaking with Alain Resnais, in Soho News, 23 December 1980. Retrieved 18 August 2014.
  34. ^ "Medicine in the Media", in British Medical Journal, 1 July 1978, pp. 48–49.
  35. ^ David Thomson. The New Biographical Dictionary of Film. London: Little, Brown, 2002. p. 730: "Providence grows as time passes".
  36. ^ Peter Graham, "New directions in French cinema", in The Oxford History of World Cinema; edited by Geoffrey Nowell-Smith. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996.
  37. ^ Jonathan Rosenbaum, Providence, in Chicago Reader, 26 October 2000. Retrieved 17 August 2014.
  38. ^ Tacita Dean, in . Retrieved 17 August 2014.
  39. ^ Jean Regazzi, Le roman dans le cinéma: retour à Providence. Paris: L'Harmattan, 2010. p. 191. Quotes the objection thus: "une déplorable concession au cinéma conventionnel, le reniement petit-bourgeois et consensuel de toutes les audaces expérimentales des quatre cinquièmes du film...."
  40. ^ Jean Regazzi, Le roman dans le cinéma: retour à Providence. Paris: L'Harmattan, 2010. p. 195.
  41. ^ Emma Wilson. Alain Resnais. Manchester University Press, 2006. p. 138.
  42. ^ . www.bfi.org.uk. Archived from the original on July 21, 2019. Retrieved 2019-07-21.

External links edit

providence, 1977, film, providence, 1977, french, swiss, film, directed, alain, resnais, from, screenplay, david, mercer, explores, processes, creativity, through, portrayal, ageing, novelist, played, john, gielgud, imagines, scenes, latest, novel, which, draw. Providence is a 1977 French Swiss film directed by Alain Resnais from a screenplay by David Mercer It explores the processes of creativity through a portrayal of an ageing novelist played by John Gielgud who imagines scenes for his latest novel which draw upon his past and his relationships with members of his family The film won the 1978 Cesar Award for Best Film ProvidenceDirected byAlain ResnaisWritten byDavid MercerStarringDirk BogardeEllen BurstynJohn GielgudDavid WarnerElaine StritchCinematographyRicardo AronovichEdited byAlbert JurgensonMusic byMiklos RozsaRelease dates25 January 1977 1977 01 25 USA 9 February 1977 1977 02 09 France Running time110 minutesCountriesFranceSwitzerlandLanguagesEnglishFrench Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Themes 4 Reception and influence 5 Awards and nominations 6 References 7 External linksPlot editOn the eve of his 78th birthday the ailing alcoholic writer Clive Langham spends a painful and sleepless night mentally composing and recomposing scenes for a novel in which characters based on his own family are shaped by his fantasies and memories alongside his caustic commentary on their behaviour His son Claude appears as a cold and unforgiving prosecuting lawyer who revels in spiteful repartee His second illegitimate son Kevin features as an idealistic soldier accused of the mercy killing of an old man who was being hunted down Claude s wife Sonia shows sympathy with Kevin and seems eager to seduce him in protest at her husband s callousness Clive also invents the character of Helen as Claude s mistress but she bears the features of Clive s dead wife Molly who committed suicide Clive s imagination is also haunted by scenes of an autopsy on the corpse of an old man a military round up of elderly people who are detained in a sports stadium and a dark tangled forest in which a hunted man metamorphoses into a werewolf Before Clive loses consciousness it is Kevin whom he sees as the werewolf in the forest Claude shoots Kevin but seems to identify him with their father On the following day Clive welcomes Claude Sonia and Kevin in reality an astrophysicist for an idyllic birthday lunch in the sunlit garden of his country mansion and their relationships are characterised by mutual affection and good humour albeit with signs of self restraint in deference to the occasion After lunch in what he seems to envisage as a final parting Clive unexpectedly asks them all to leave without a word Cast editJohn Gielgud as Clive Langham Gielgud described his role as a very tough Augustus John kind of character drunk half the time lying in bed drinking white wine and throwing bottles about and roaring a lot of very coarse dialogue 1 Dirk Bogarde as Claude Langham Ellen Burstyn as Sonia Langham David Warner as Kevin Langham Kevin Woodford Elaine Stritch as Helen Wiener Cyril Luckham as Doctor Mark Eddington Denis Lawson as Dave Woodford Kathryn Leigh Scott as Miss Boon Milo Sperber as Mr Jenner Anna Wing as Karen Peter Arne as Nils Tanya Lopert as Miss Lister Production editThe producer Klaus Hellwig suggested to Resnais that he should make a film with the British playwright David Mercer The two men met in London and overcoming the obstacle that neither of them spoke the language of the other fluently they began a series of discussions of drafts and redraftings which extended over a year Mercer s original idea concerned the situation of political prisoners held in a sports stadium symbolising a world in collapse Gradually the outline shifted to the imagination of an aging writer seeking the material for a novel Resnais proposed making the whole film into a metaphor of creation and disintegration he also made extensive alterations to the chronology of the scenes as written by Mercer 2 The title of the film was also supplied by the producer signifying both the name of the estate where the ageing novelist lives and also the controlling hand with which he arranges the fate of his characters The name evoked further associations with the American city of Providence the home of the fantasy writer H P Lovecraft whose gothic stories inspired some of the imagery in the film 3 The original intention was to shoot the film in the United States in New England but for reasons of cost this became impracticable Certain exterior scenes were filmed in Providence and in Albany in the US while others were done in Brussels Antwerp and Louvain these were used in conjunction with each other to form a composite cityscape for the background of certain scenes Studio scenes were filmed in Paris The final birthday party sequence was shot on location at the chateau de Montmery at Ambazac near Limoges Filming took place between April and June 1976 4 5 The set designs were created by Jacques Saulnier a regular collaborator with Resnais and he won a Cesar award for his work In order to create a funereal atmosphere grey and dark shades predominated in the design and strong colours were excluded Saulnier recalled that Resnais made him read Lovecraft in order to imbue Langham s house with the presence of death I imagined it like a family tomb In some scenes created in Clive Langham s imagination the layout of a set changes between one shot and another for instance the door in the corner of a room in one shot appears at the bottom of a flight of stairs in another a conversation between four characters alone in one scene continues in the midst of a party in the next Some settings use a painted backdrop which has a deliberately theatrical appearance one of them portrays a seascape in which artificial waves surge up among the painted rocks achieved by blowing bursts of polystyrene foam pieces from beneath the set 6 7 8 9 Providence was Resnais s first film in English and a prestigious cast of British and American actors was engaged despite the restrictions on the budget Resnais held a longstanding ambition to cast John Gielgud in a substantial film role having seen him performing on stage and was encouraged to approach him by Dirk Bogarde 10 11 Gielgud later described the project as by far the most exciting film I have ever made and noted the impressive calmness of Resnais throughout filming which made him wonderful to work with He also recalled the contribution made by Florence Malraux Resnais s wife who spoke fluent English and helped overcome the director s limitations in that respect 1 Resnais attached great importance to the interplay of vocal timbres of his principal actors and he described how he thought of them as a Schubertian quintet Ellen Burstyn a violin Dirk Bogarde a piano David Warner a viola John Gielgud a cello and Elaine Stritch a double bass 12 The original intention had been to make the film in French translating it from the English Resnais however soon felt that it would not work in French I could hear it so clearly in English and anyway Mercer s writing depended on the English inflection The producers agreed but insisted that there should also be a French version 13 The process of dubbing the completed work into French was undertaken with particular care the voice actors included Claude Dauphin as Clive Francois Perier as Claude Gerard Depardieu as Kevin Nelly Borgeaud as Sonia and Suzanne Flon as Helen For the music Resnais turned to the Hungarian born Hollywood composer Miklos Rozsa whom he had admired especially for his work on the 1949 version of Madame Bovary Rozsa later cited Resnais as one of the few directors in his experience who really understood the function of music in film Soundtrack albums were eventually issued on LP and CD Themes edit Resnais described the film as a macabre divertissement insisting that he wanted it to be funny despite the darkness of its themes 14 He also said that one of the questions which the film poses is whether we are the people we think we are or whether we become what others make of us in their judgments 15 A central theme is the process of artistic creation Providence is a meta film a film about the making of films a work of art about the fabricating of art works 16 Expanding this idea The film suggests some symbiotic relation between creator and created script The characters are Clive s creations yet he speaks to them as if they were wilful children Their status is ambiguous since they a composite they are dream figures created characters and also individuals who are part of Clive s proximate reality 17 In counterpoint with creativity the theme of death recurs constantly not so much as a subject in itself but in Clive s struggle to avoid it Resnais described the film as telling the story of the old writer s determination not to die and his continual drinking and imagining are the evidence of his refusal to let go 18 As well as the funereal aspects of the decor and the scenes of autopsy the repeated instances of metamorphosis of a character into a werewolf is linked to the advent of death with the implication that the process of dying reduces man to animal 19 Clive also has an obsession that the young are trying to push him aside to kill him which he visualises in the scenes of the stadium concentration camp where the old are rounded up by soldiers who are all young 18 Other motifs which contribute to the mood of morbid anxiety are the military search parties and images of deportation the helicopter surveillance the sound of bombs and ambulance sirens and the demolition of buildings 20 21 As several writers about the film have observed the opening sequence mirrors the beginning of Citizen Kane the plaque outside the house the camera closing in on a lighted doorway the breaking of a glass object the close up of the lips of Clive as he curses 22 23 24 Whereas the personality of Kane is explored through the separate versions of people who knew him in Providence it is the central figure of Clive who draws the characters of the members of his family and gives a reflection of himself through them One of the thoughts on his own style of expression that was written for the character of Clive by David Mercer has been noted by many critics as especially applicable to Resnais himself Citing a criticism of his own creative work that the pursuit of style has often resulted in a lack of feeling Clive then argues back that Style is feeling in its most elegant and economic expression 25 Reception and influence editIn France the press response to Providence at the time of its release and again at its re release in 1983 was overwhelmingly enthusiastic Many argued that it was a film of great cultural importance and a highlight in Resnais s career 26 The film went on to win seven prizes at the Cesar awards including Best Film and Best Director 27 By contrast reviewers in the United States were predominantly hostile to the film 28 Vincent Canby in The New York Times called it a disastrously ill chosen comedy and a lot of fuss and fake feathers about nothing he found the script pretentious and the structure complicated without being complex 29 For John Simon in New York it was an unmitigated disaster in which he criticised almost every aspect with the exception of John Gielgud s performance 30 Pauline Kael wrote a 2000 word review in The New Yorker which found fault with the contradictory structure the stilted language the artificiality of the acting and the glacial directorial style of the film before concluding that all it amounted to was the pain of a clever English play 31 A short notice in Variety took a different view referring to an unusual visual tour de force offering dense insights into the flights of imagination of a supposedly dying writer 32 In the UK the film received a more varied reception and it had a successful box office run in London 33 David Robinson writing in The Times was troubled by the quality of the writing Resnais s visual creations seem very flimsily supported on the frame of David Mercer s script the writing again is self conscious stiffly literary The dialogue is formal and artificial And the pretensions of the text only increase suspicion that it is not about very much at all 23 A non judgmental review in the Monthly Film Bulletin emphasised the many layers of thematic cross reference both within the film and beyond it with echoes of other work written by David Mercer and elements from other films as well as the occasional interleaving of European and American landscapes 24 Gilbert Adair in Sight amp Sound contrasted David Mercer s excessively literal script in which nothing is left unstated with the extent of the personal mythology and fantasy which Resnais was able to introduce into the film he found the work enriched by its anti naturalistic devices such as the gaffes in continuity which emerge in Clive s plotting of his novel and the exchange of voices of the characters as well as by the disjunctive appearances of a clownish footballer in inappropriate scenes and despite certain reservations he concluded that the dream cast perform together superbly 21 A specific criticism of one aspect of the film appeared in a comment column of the British Medical Journal where it was argued that the inclusion of scenes of a post mortem on a corpse accurate but unsparing was undignified and uncivilised and ought to be condemned because the audience was not prepared for them and they were unnecessary to the plot 34 Retrospective evaluations of Providence have generally been more positive than the contemporary ones 35 In the Oxford History of World Cinema it is described as a magisterial and deeply moving incursion into the fantasies of a dying man 36 For the critic Jonathan Rosenbaum The superb performances and Miklos Rozsa s sumptuous Hollywood style score give the film s conceit a moving monumentality and depth and Resnais insights into the fiction making process are mesmerising and beautiful 37 The artist Tacita Dean cited Providence as her favourite film saying that it deals effortlessly with the problems of enacting the fantasies of a writer s imagination It mixes places and time within single sequences to create an uncanny sense of dislocation but its brilliance is its leanness not a single moment of excess 38 One of the aspects of the film which has generated most comment and disagreement is the interpretation of the two part structure and to what extent one of them represents deception and the other truth For Pauline Kael the imagined part and the real part contradict each other because either they cannot both be true or else they are not both relevant 31 Others have found different grounds for criticism arguing that the final real section represents a compromise and a concession to conventional cinema a denial of all the bold experimentation of the previous four fifths of the film 39 Alain Robbe Grillet writer of the screenplay for Resnais s earlier exploration of imagination and recollection L Annee derniere a Marienbad was one of those who disapproved of the final section 40 An alternative view is that the final lyrical section of the birthday party does not present a definitive picture of the family as they really are but rather another perspective on them in the puzzle which Clive both as writer and as father is trying to solve 24 As one critic has expressed it The second part of the film supplements the first by altering its effect by denying its sometimes hostile paranoid proof but not by eradicating these altogether The parts of the film open Providence up as a series of reflecting realities which wound together may offer something of the hesitance and doubt of mental process In this sense Providence may be seen as a precursor to the work of David Lynch in films such as Lost Highway 1997 and Mulholland Drive 2001 41 Providence received five top 10 votes three from critics and two from directors in the 2012 Sight amp Sound polls of the greatest films ever made 42 Awards and nominations editBodil Awards Denmark Won Best European Film Cesar Awards France Won Best Director Alain Resnais Won Best Editing Albert Jurgenson Won Best Film Won Best Music Miklos Rozsa Won Best Production Design Jacques Saulnier Won Best Sound Rene Magnol and Jacques Maumont Won Best Writing David Mercer Nominated Best Cinematography Ricardo Aronovich French Syndicate of Cinema Critics France Won Best Film New York Film Critics USA Won Best Actor John Gielgud Valladolid Film Festival Spain Won Golden Spike Alain Resnais References edit a b John Gielgud An Actor and His Time London Sidgwick amp Jackson 1989 revised edition pp 195 198 Entretien avec David Mercer in Robert Benayoun Alain Resnais arpenteur de l imaginaire Paris Editions Ramsay 2008 pp 275 277 also p 159 Entretien avec Alain Resnais sur Providence in Robert Benayoun Alain Resnais arpenteur de l imaginaire Paris Editions Ramsay 2008 pp 228 240 241 Robert Benayoun Alain Resnais arpenteur de l imaginaire Paris Editions Ramsay 2008 pp 238 299 Le Populaire 02 03 2014 Retrieved 10 August 2014 Jacques Saulnier in Jean Luc Douin Alain Resnais Paris Editions de la Martiniere 2013 pp 256 257 Suzanne Liandrat Guigues Jean Louis Leutrat Alain Resnais liaisons secretes accords vagabonds Paris Cahiers du Cinema 2006 p 91 Jacques Saulnier interviewed in A propos de Providence film documentary accompanying the DVD of Providence issued by Edition Jupiter in 2013 Jean Regazzi Le roman dans le cinema retour a Providence Paris L Harmattan 2010 p 175 Suzanne Liandrat Guigues Jean Louis Leutrat Alain Resnais liaisons secretes accords vagabonds Paris Cahiers du Cinema 2006 pp 232 233 Alain Resnais in an interview accompanying the DVD of Providence issued by Edition Jupiter in 2013 Entretien avec Alain Resnais sur Providence in Robert Benayoun Alain Resnais arpenteur de l imaginaire Paris Editions Ramsay 2008 p 240 Nicholas Wapshott Resnais s continuing capacity to surprise interview in The Times 17 November 1980 p 10 But later the producers came back to us and said that in New York the fact that it would be in English counted against the film They prefer their European films to be in a foreign language with sub titles I suggested that we should send the dubbed French version to New York with English sub titles Entretien avec Alain Resnais sur Providence in Robert Benayoun Alain Resnais arpenteur de l imaginaire Paris Editions Ramsay 2008 p 236 j espere que ce film est drole car je le vois comme un divertissement macabre certes et noir mais un divertissement tout de meme Entretien avec Alain Resnais sur Providence in Robert Benayoun Alain Resnais arpenteur de l imaginaire Paris Editions Ramsay 2008 p 228 L une des questions que pose le film est si vous voulez celle ci est ce que nous sommes ce que nous pensons etre ou est ce que nous devenons ce que les autres font de nous dans leurs jugements William F Van Wert Meta film and point of view Alain Resnais Providence in Sight amp Sound Summer 1979 p 179 Emma Wilson Alain Resnais Manchester University Press 2006 p 135 a b Entretien avec Alain Resnais sur Providence in Robert Benayoun Alain Resnais arpenteur de l imaginaire Paris Editions Ramsay 2008 p 229 Gerald Weales Review of Providence in Film Quarterly vol 30 4 Summer 1987 pp 21 24 Emma Wilson Alain Resnais Manchester University Press 2006 p 133 a b Gilbert Adair Providence review in Sight amp Sound March 1977 pp 120 121 Jean Luc Douin Alain Resnais Paris Editions de la Martiniere 2013 p 121 a b David Robinson Events of a sleepless night review in The Times 12 May 1978 p 9 a b c Richard Combs in Monthly Film Bulletin March 1978 pp 51 52 Entretien avec David Mercer in Robert Benayoun Alain Resnais arpenteur de l imaginaire Paris Editions Ramsay 2008 pp 277 278 Jean Regazzi Le roman dans le cinema retour a Providence Paris L Harmattan 2010 pp 191 192 quotes the following Robert Chazal France Soir 10 2 1977 du tres grand art un chef d œuvre France Nouvelle 31 1 1977 un tres grand evenement Michel Mohrt Le Figaro 19 2 1977 une œuvre maitresse La Republicain lorain 8 2 1977 Un sommet du cinema Alain Remond Telerama 9 2 1977 Providence c est le Resnais de la grande epoque Le Quotidien de Paris 15 2 1977 Lauriers pour Alain Resnais Palmares Providence at l Academie des Arts et Techniques du Cinema Retrieved 17 August 2014 Obituary of Alain Resnais by Tim Page in The Washington Post 3 March 2014 Retrieved 8 August 2014 Providence review by Vincent Canby in The New York Times 26 January 1977 Retrieved 16 August 2014 John Simon Providence improvident imprudent impossible New York 31 Jan 1977 p 70 a b Paul Kael Werewolf mon amour in The New Yorker 31 January 1977 pp 70 72 Review Providence in Variety 31 December 1976 Retrieved 17 August 2014 Interview with Jonathan Rosenbaum A Lesson in Modesty Speaking with Alain Resnais in Soho News 23 December 1980 Retrieved 18 August 2014 Medicine in the Media in British Medical Journal 1 July 1978 pp 48 49 David Thomson The New Biographical Dictionary of Film London Little Brown 2002 p 730 Providence grows as time passes Peter Graham New directions in French cinema in The Oxford History of World Cinema edited by Geoffrey Nowell Smith Oxford Oxford University Press 1996 Jonathan Rosenbaum Providence in Chicago Reader 26 October 2000 Retrieved 17 August 2014 Tacita Dean in Sight amp Sound 2012 Greatest Films Poll Retrieved 17 August 2014 Jean Regazzi Le roman dans le cinema retour a Providence Paris L Harmattan 2010 p 191 Quotes the objection thus une deplorable concession au cinema conventionnel le reniement petit bourgeois et consensuel de toutes les audaces experimentales des quatre cinquiemes du film Jean Regazzi Le roman dans le cinema retour a Providence Paris L Harmattan 2010 p 195 Emma Wilson Alain Resnais Manchester University Press 2006 p 138 Votes for Providence 1977 BFI www bfi org uk Archived from the original on July 21 2019 Retrieved 2019 07 21 External links editProvidence at IMDb nbsp Providence at Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Providence 1977 film amp oldid 1180293295, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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