Saturday, December 30, 2017

Review: “You Can’t Kiss a French Movie”

A multi-media show by Shelley Farmer and Alex Hare creates a dialogue between theater and independent filmmaking, borrowing its style from French New Wave.
An awkward production assistant Agness (Erin Healani Chung) dressed in all black, makes her way in front of the audience and delivers the usual theater announcements about the fire exits and cell phones. Her badly hidden nervousness and excitement puzzle me for a moment. Is this for real? Or have the You Can’t Kiss a French Movie already began? This experimental play by Shelley Farmer and Alex Hare is designed like a Russian nesting doll: it’s a movie shot on a theater stage, and is inspired by French New Wave films.   

Shelley Farmer and Greg Balla in You Can’t Kiss a French Movie. Photo by photo by Emma Wainwright.

Lola (Shelley Farmer) is a cabaret singer in love with Michel (Greg Balla). Introduced to us through the camera in the hands of the Cameraman/Director (Adam Weppler), they first appear offstage behind the curtain and on the screen in front of us. Cinephilia has a voyeuristic nature, which the director Alex Hare cleverly emphasizes by staging some of the scenes in the spaces fully or partially obscured from the audience and faithfully streaming everything on the big screen. But is the camera gaze objective or objectifying? 

Farmer eventually takes the initiative in her hands and overthrows the authority of almighty Director/Cameraman. You Can’t Kiss a French Movie, styled after the films of Godard, tries to be less of a nostalgic sentiment of the past and more of a cautionary tale for modern filmmakers. It teaches us to take matters into our own hands in order to tell our own stories. Unfortunately, the feminist message of the finale feels forced.   

 
The cinematic beauty is the play’s strongest feature. Even though the few elements of the sets, designed by An-Lin Dauber, are right before our eyes, they come alive on screen anew, touched by movie magic. Lighting design by Jennifer Fok and camera work by Adam Weppler make the picture on the big screen irresistibly delicious.
The only movie scene that is pre-filmed as opposed to live-streamed takes place on a train platform on a beautiful, snowy day. Farmer and Balla are recording a voiceover for it. The slight discrepancy between the lip movement and actor’s voices doesn’t allow us to slip into somnambulistic film-watching mode. This encourages watching and listening critically. But the beautiful black-and-white image draws us in, making a strong argument for the artistic craft that filmmaking requires. Having the noble intention behind the beautiful picture is perhaps more important, but You Can’t Kiss a French Movie doesn’t make a very strong argument in the ideological department.
However, the show is a success in facilitating the dialogue between theater and film. In most multi-media productions, video projections are merely a tool, a window to a different time (Dodin’s Cherry Orchrd, where home films illustrate how happy the life once was), space (Van Hove’s Kings, where the entire labyrinth of backstage is only visible through the live-stream) or the depths of human soul in the actor’s close-up (Thomas Ostermeier’s Richard III, where the power of final monologue is doubled by the blown up video of Richard’s face).

You Can’t Kiss a French Movie, being a theater show about movie making, takes the capabilities of live-streaming even further in the scenes where the interaction between the actors and the projection are simultaneously unfolding next to each other. The intimacy of HERE’s downstairs theater allows for the similar reality-to-screen scale ratio, which essentially means that you see the same scene twice in the mirror-like effect. Except that the reflection is subjective and represents the vision of a person behind the camera. This is where the show makes its strongest argument even before any of the words of rebelling feminism are spoken.

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You Can’t Kiss a French Movie played at HERE, 145 6th Ave, Manhattan, on December 15-17, 2017. The running time is 70 minutes with no intermission.

You Can’t Kiss a French Movie is by Shelley Farmer and Alex Hare. Directed by Alex Hare. Produced by Madeleine Goldsmith. Set and costume design is by An-Lin Dauber. Lighting design is by Jennifer Fok. Original Music is by Michael Gildin. Sound Design is by Gabriel Lozada. Film Consultation is by John Zhao.

The cast is Shelley Farmer, Greg Balla, Erin Healani Chung, and Adam Weppler

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