6 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :- Le Gai Savoir, 4 July 2006
Author:
sadeanarchist from France
As descendants of Rousseau and Lumumba (Léaud and Berto) deconstruct
images and sounds in the absolute darkness of an isolated studio,
Godard, as the film repeatedly calls for, 'goes back to zero.' That is,
he distills and destroys all the elements composing cinema and hurls 95
minutes worth of molotov cocktails at the establishment. Indeed, Godard
is seen in the film only through his voice, as he whispers amidst the
sound of a radio, like a guerillero preparing his attack on
institutional cinema. More situationist than Marxist-Leninist, Le Gai
Savoir has a unique sense of tenderness and wit, more of a continuation
of leftist pop art that was La Chinoise than the nihilistic attack on
consumer society that was WeekEnd or the cerebral rhetoric of a Lotte
In Italia. Perhaps it is also due to the presence of Jean Pierre Léaud,
the ultimate symbol of the 1960s as seen through the cinema, that Le
Gai Savoir is at once in an announcement of something to come and a
kind of unconscious eulogy for the end of 1968 (the film began before
the protests and was completed after), today it stands as one of the
most moving, remarkable and tender hommages to revolutionary aspiration
and youth power ever made. As Jean-Pierre and Juliet discuss their
revolutionary aspirations, their hopes and dreams, their rhetoric and
their philosophy, powerful symbols of radicalism and pop culture strike
the audience like a hammer coming out of the screen: A photo of Fidel
Castro cutting cane, the sound of a revolutionary Cuban song, a famous
quote by Ché Guevara, a reflection on Mao Zedong, many cartoons, a shot
of Juliet standing in front of a background dedicated with comic book
characters, the sound of a mechanical whistle which blasts through the
screen sometimes and then finally, the logical conclusion of Godard's
radical experiment with the chemistry of cinema, the complete
dissolution of all the elements, a black screen with only sounds, so
that we can return to the origin of everything, and recreate society.
13 out of 21 people found the following comment useful :- Not his best, 7 July 2006
Author:
fred3f from United States
This film is one of Godard's most didactic and least cinematic. It
could easily have been a play. Taking place on a bare sound stage, the
characters are meant to seem detached from the distractions of the
world. This is supposed to allow them to dwell completely in the world
of ideas and come to terms with the essence of revolution. But oddly
this device seems to work against Goddard. Istead of creating an
atmosphere of purity and lack of compromise, it seems as if they have
detached themselves from reality and are completely wrapped up in
themselves. One gets the idea that their thoughts are overblown to the
point of becoming egotistical. Goddard is trying to show two people
willing to go to the limits of their ideas. It is an interesting
concept, but long after the point is made, he continues to make it to
the point of tedium. Where Goddard tries to be an iconoclast, he only
achieves a very painful boredom. It is an experiment that didn't work.
The concept of the film sounds good but in practice it doesn't come
across.
I think this film is only for the hard core Goddard fan, or someone who
so strongly agrees with his social-political view, that any statement
of them is reassuring and pleasant. Unless you are one or the other,
proceed at your own risk.
I saw this when it came out in the 60's at a film fest in NYC at
Lincoln Center. I was a big fan of Goddard at the time, but this film
changed that. I didn't see another Goddard film for 10 years. I have
gotten back to enjoying his films, but I would never revisit this one.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :- one of my favorite Godard films, 18 April 2007
Author:
chillroom-1 from United States
It has been almost twenty five years since I've seen this -- I saw it a
couple times in the early 80s and I've never seen it available on tape
or disk -- but I found it to be one of the most enjoyable lesson films
from Godard. I though it was beautiful to look at, and quite funny in
parts, and easy to follow. It IS extremely didactic -- but as the title
says, there is JOY in learning. It's popping up in a Godard festival
running at the Hammer Museum in June, on a double bill with Weekend,
and I intend to check it out again. If I don't like it this time, I'll
write again -- but I remember just totally digging this movie. The
other writer here says that he didn't go to a Godard film for ten years
he so disliked this -- but in my memory it was so joyous i wanted to
see it again and again. hey -- maybe we're both right (or wrong).
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :- Something of the ultimate montage movie, 3 March 2005
Author:
carll-2 from Finland
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
One rather confusing film. Apparently deliberately so. I enjoyed it
thoroughly though.
Some of the themes seemed to be:
May 68
The inability to get rid of bourgeois society
Sexuality - as something that brings together but rips apart
Language
Knowledge
As usually with Godard it's also an statement about film - and in this
case more than usually. It ends with Godards voice-over over a
completely black screen saying something like that this is not the film
that should be made, but that all films that will be made should have
something that is this film.
the semantics and visuals of revolutionary minimalism, 12 September 2008
Author:
Filmjack3 from United States
At one point in this cinematic essay (as someone close put it, not
really a real storyteller Godard is here but an essayist with camera
and sound), some still images pop up with Che Guevara speaking (I think
it's Che), and it says that (to paraphrase) in order to be a true
revolutionary one must love. I wonder how much love Godard really has
to offer, or can really share through his film-making in the case of
"The Joy of Learning" or Le Gai savoir. His film here, a capstone of
his late 1960s work that started amazingly (La Chinoise and especially
Week End with Sympathy for the Devil thrown in the mix) and ended with
this, is cold and analytical and sometimes put together in such a way
that I would need a professor in an advanced film and politics class to
really get everything across in a class discussion. This is no longer a
Godard who can communicate philosophical and poetic and political
dialog through the means of cinematic entertainment and "CINEMA" (in
caps and quotes), but an anarchist out to f*** with time and space and
language... and only sometimes succeeding in my estimation.
This doesn't mean that for some intellectuals or just those tuned into
the socialist/Maoist revolutionary aesthetic may not have some
enjoyment or tickling of the intellect here. Indeed there are some
moments that even stick out amid the whole jambalaya of discourse and
narration and non-sensible/incredulously self-indulgent diatribes by
the two characters. But I was strangely more intrigued by the visual
pattern more than the actual dialog and political ideas, wherein the
two characters are placed amid a black background, minimal but striking
and provocative lighting set-ups, and spliced-in still images of
newspaper clippings and communist propaganda with a car's view of
driving around a French city. It may be the strongest criticism of all
that I connected more (and was wondering what his thinking was) to
Godard as a director and editor than as a "screenwriter". So much of
what's in here is only interesting in small bits and pieces as far as
information goes, and has been presented better, more audaciously in
other pictures (and with less satirical bite and bile than La Chinoise,
possibly his masterpiece of political cinema), and I'm left with
wondering how he did this or that or what his thinking was doing it
then the actual ideas.
But that's just me, your 'love most 60's Godard, usually bored or
perplexed by everything after' movie-buff.
Own the rights?

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6 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-

Le Gai Savoir, 4 July 2006
Author: sadeanarchist from France
As descendants of Rousseau and Lumumba (Léaud and Berto) deconstruct images and sounds in the absolute darkness of an isolated studio, Godard, as the film repeatedly calls for, 'goes back to zero.' That is, he distills and destroys all the elements composing cinema and hurls 95 minutes worth of molotov cocktails at the establishment. Indeed, Godard is seen in the film only through his voice, as he whispers amidst the sound of a radio, like a guerillero preparing his attack on institutional cinema. More situationist than Marxist-Leninist, Le Gai Savoir has a unique sense of tenderness and wit, more of a continuation of leftist pop art that was La Chinoise than the nihilistic attack on consumer society that was WeekEnd or the cerebral rhetoric of a Lotte In Italia. Perhaps it is also due to the presence of Jean Pierre Léaud, the ultimate symbol of the 1960s as seen through the cinema, that Le Gai Savoir is at once in an announcement of something to come and a kind of unconscious eulogy for the end of 1968 (the film began before the protests and was completed after), today it stands as one of the most moving, remarkable and tender hommages to revolutionary aspiration and youth power ever made. As Jean-Pierre and Juliet discuss their revolutionary aspirations, their hopes and dreams, their rhetoric and their philosophy, powerful symbols of radicalism and pop culture strike the audience like a hammer coming out of the screen: A photo of Fidel Castro cutting cane, the sound of a revolutionary Cuban song, a famous quote by Ché Guevara, a reflection on Mao Zedong, many cartoons, a shot of Juliet standing in front of a background dedicated with comic book characters, the sound of a mechanical whistle which blasts through the screen sometimes and then finally, the logical conclusion of Godard's radical experiment with the chemistry of cinema, the complete dissolution of all the elements, a black screen with only sounds, so that we can return to the origin of everything, and recreate society.
13 out of 21 people found the following comment useful :-

Not his best, 7 July 2006
Author: fred3f from United States
This film is one of Godard's most didactic and least cinematic. It could easily have been a play. Taking place on a bare sound stage, the characters are meant to seem detached from the distractions of the world. This is supposed to allow them to dwell completely in the world of ideas and come to terms with the essence of revolution. But oddly this device seems to work against Goddard. Istead of creating an atmosphere of purity and lack of compromise, it seems as if they have detached themselves from reality and are completely wrapped up in themselves. One gets the idea that their thoughts are overblown to the point of becoming egotistical. Goddard is trying to show two people willing to go to the limits of their ideas. It is an interesting concept, but long after the point is made, he continues to make it to the point of tedium. Where Goddard tries to be an iconoclast, he only achieves a very painful boredom. It is an experiment that didn't work. The concept of the film sounds good but in practice it doesn't come across.
I think this film is only for the hard core Goddard fan, or someone who so strongly agrees with his social-political view, that any statement of them is reassuring and pleasant. Unless you are one or the other, proceed at your own risk.
I saw this when it came out in the 60's at a film fest in NYC at Lincoln Center. I was a big fan of Goddard at the time, but this film changed that. I didn't see another Goddard film for 10 years. I have gotten back to enjoying his films, but I would never revisit this one.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :-

one of my favorite Godard films, 18 April 2007
Author: chillroom-1 from United States
It has been almost twenty five years since I've seen this -- I saw it a couple times in the early 80s and I've never seen it available on tape or disk -- but I found it to be one of the most enjoyable lesson films from Godard. I though it was beautiful to look at, and quite funny in parts, and easy to follow. It IS extremely didactic -- but as the title says, there is JOY in learning. It's popping up in a Godard festival running at the Hammer Museum in June, on a double bill with Weekend, and I intend to check it out again. If I don't like it this time, I'll write again -- but I remember just totally digging this movie. The other writer here says that he didn't go to a Godard film for ten years he so disliked this -- but in my memory it was so joyous i wanted to see it again and again. hey -- maybe we're both right (or wrong).
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :-

Something of the ultimate montage movie, 3 March 2005
Author: carll-2 from Finland
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
One rather confusing film. Apparently deliberately so. I enjoyed it thoroughly though.
Some of the themes seemed to be:
May 68
The inability to get rid of bourgeois society
Sexuality - as something that brings together but rips apart
Language
Knowledge
As usually with Godard it's also an statement about film - and in this case more than usually. It ends with Godards voice-over over a completely black screen saying something like that this is not the film that should be made, but that all films that will be made should have something that is this film.
the semantics and visuals of revolutionary minimalism, 12 September 2008

Author: Filmjack3 from United States
At one point in this cinematic essay (as someone close put it, not really a real storyteller Godard is here but an essayist with camera and sound), some still images pop up with Che Guevara speaking (I think it's Che), and it says that (to paraphrase) in order to be a true revolutionary one must love. I wonder how much love Godard really has to offer, or can really share through his film-making in the case of "The Joy of Learning" or Le Gai savoir. His film here, a capstone of his late 1960s work that started amazingly (La Chinoise and especially Week End with Sympathy for the Devil thrown in the mix) and ended with this, is cold and analytical and sometimes put together in such a way that I would need a professor in an advanced film and politics class to really get everything across in a class discussion. This is no longer a Godard who can communicate philosophical and poetic and political dialog through the means of cinematic entertainment and "CINEMA" (in caps and quotes), but an anarchist out to f*** with time and space and language... and only sometimes succeeding in my estimation.
This doesn't mean that for some intellectuals or just those tuned into the socialist/Maoist revolutionary aesthetic may not have some enjoyment or tickling of the intellect here. Indeed there are some moments that even stick out amid the whole jambalaya of discourse and narration and non-sensible/incredulously self-indulgent diatribes by the two characters. But I was strangely more intrigued by the visual pattern more than the actual dialog and political ideas, wherein the two characters are placed amid a black background, minimal but striking and provocative lighting set-ups, and spliced-in still images of newspaper clippings and communist propaganda with a car's view of driving around a French city. It may be the strongest criticism of all that I connected more (and was wondering what his thinking was) to Godard as a director and editor than as a "screenwriter". So much of what's in here is only interesting in small bits and pieces as far as information goes, and has been presented better, more audaciously in other pictures (and with less satirical bite and bile than La Chinoise, possibly his masterpiece of political cinema), and I'm left with wondering how he did this or that or what his thinking was doing it then the actual ideas.
But that's just me, your 'love most 60's Godard, usually bored or perplexed by everything after' movie-buff.
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