Los Angeles Times

An enchanting journey

Modern critic makes case for Jean Vigo’s ‘L’Atalante,’ which was poorly received in ’34.

- By Robert Abele calendar@latimes.com

The son of anarchists, a sufferer of tuberculos­is and a playful movie poet, French filmmaker Jean Vigo died at age 29, mere days after completing his only feature, 1934’s river-bound romance “L’Atalante.” Poor health robbed cinema of a wholly original talent, but “L’Atalante” survives to enchant and mystify, and it now arrives in a 4K restoratio­n overseen by Gaumont that used an original nitrate print kept all these years by the British Film Institute.

Thankfully kept, that is, because Vigo’s movie was so poorly received on original release that it was recut in a failed attempt to make it more commercial.

What did the studio think wasn’t commercial in the fable-ish tale of newlyweds Jean (Jean Dasté), a barge captain, and naïve country girl Juliette (a glowing Dita Parlo)? The emphasis on an elusive mood over a taut story? The remnants of 1920s-era surrealism that occasional­ly adorned Vigo’s vision and pacing? The carnival-esque touches and dreamlike nature of certain sequences? Certainly not the multiplyin­g cats, that hover, dart through and slink across the frame in the boat scenes like born photobombe­rs. Nor could it be Michel Simon as the most compelling­ly irascible of tattooed, drunken, yet sentimenta­l old salts.

There’s imagery and camerawork in the first halfhour that you’d be hardpresse­d to forget: a rush of enigmatic steam rising into a river vista; a wedding party following the lovers like a funeral procession; Parlo in bridal satin, seen in long shot, walking the leng th of the barge in the opposite direction of the vessel’s movement, a figure in spectral white against a darkened landscape.

The honeymoon is short, in that a cargo delivery awaits in Paris. Juliette finds herself tempted to experience the city, while Jean’s jealousy kicks in — at first, of all things, toward Simon’s grimy crew hand Père Jules, whose exotic possession­s collected from around the world (some eerie, some sexual) entrance Juliette. That’s followed by the couple’s excursion to a café on land, which puts them in the cross-hairs of a flirtatiou­s peddler whose attention toward Juliette further introduces a frisson of doubt into the union. So much so that later, when Juliette sneaks off the barge at night to taste more of Paris, Jean sets sail in the morning without her.

“L’Atalante” is about how the world, in its wonder and cruelty, is both for and against lovers, often dizzyingly so. And what splendidly captures this as well as anything is Maurice Jaubert’s wonderful score, which Vigo used judiciousl­y, often marrying it exquisitel­y to diegetic rhythms (a far-off bell, industrial clacking, an on-screen accordion) for enthrallin­g effect. It’s a brilliant early example of the possibilit­ies the sound era offered in framing a story’s emotions to carry a moviegoer along. Jaubert’s tuneful contributi­on is made all the more hypnotic by the many earthy, realistic sequences in which no music plays. That way, when it emerges, as when it decorates the movie’s famous crosscutti­ng of its separated lovers — she in a drab hotel, he on the barge — in simultaneo­us erotic reverie, the effect is memorably overwhelmi­ng.

It’s been speculated that Vigo’s demise was hurried by recklessly overexposi­ng his fragile self to the freezing temperatur­es that marked the filming. It leaves “L’Atalante” with a strange legacy spell that can absorb the sadness of its director’s short life and reconstitu­te it through each rewatching as a lyrical, shifting magnetism, depending on what each moviegoer brings to it.

Sometimes the film may seem the most direct and naturalist­ic of love stories: togetherne­ss, loneliness and reunion steered with graceful compassion. But another viewing might behold a work just otherworld­ly enough to tickle and confound. We’re lucky that Vigo’s sublimely versatile, sensory-rich masterpiec­e is there to remind us that life is strange like that — a dance with steps, a barge slowly moving one way, yet full of flights of desire that can seem gloriously unmoored.

 ?? Janus Films ?? JULIETTE (Dita Parlo) and Jean (Jean Dasté) share a moment in “L’Atalante,” back in a 4K restoratio­n.
Janus Films JULIETTE (Dita Parlo) and Jean (Jean Dasté) share a moment in “L’Atalante,” back in a 4K restoratio­n.

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