6. October 2011
19.00

India Song

India Song remains a landmark in 1970s
modernist cinema. It is set mostly in a French Embassy in Vietnam, mostly during a long evening
party. Couples dance to languid tangos, drifting through the frame or gliding
out of darkness in the huge mirror that dominates the sitting room. But there
is no synchronised dialogue. We hear anonymous voices who seem to be commenting
on the image, even though the voices are in the present and the action occurs
in the past. Moreover, most of dramatic action – seductions, betrayal, and a
suicide – takes place offscreen or in the mirror. India Song is an experiment in sustained tempo: Duras timed every
gesture and camera movement with a stop-watch. We cannot be sure that the action
we see took place or is a kind of emblematic staging of the characters’
relations. Murmurs on the sound track suggest that the party is crowded, but
the vacant long shots show only the principal characters. The film pulls the
spectator into a hypnotic reverie while also meditating upon the insular
routines of colonialist life.” (Kristin Thompson, David Bordwell, Film History: An
Introduction)

Direction and screenplay: Marguerite Duras; Language: French with
English and Slovene subtitles. 

Organisation: Slovenska Kinoteka; In collaboration: City of Women.
With the support of the Slovenian Charles Nodier Institute.

 

 

 

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