En pige på drift
What is the price of signing out of everything? My guess is
this is not the question Agnes Varda, director and writer of “Vagabond” (“Sans
toit loi”), wanted to ask, but my read on this movie is that it answers that
question quite well.
At the opening of the movie, a dead body of a young woman is
found in a ditch on a farm. The girl froze to death. We quickly learn that this
girl, Mona (Sandrine Bonnaire), is the focus of the movie, so, yes, we know how
the story ends. What follows is a journey through the last weeks of Mona’s
life.
Mona left her life as a secretary to be a drifter and this
is where we find her, wandering around the countryside of southern France in
the winter. Mona has a number of encounters with other people which always end
with Mona leaving. Invariably. There are many kinds of people and while their
interactions with Mona vary, Mona always asks something from them, a ride,
money, shelter, food or company and they always want something in return. A
truck driver wants to talk, at the car workshop they want sex, Assoun, the farmhand,
wants a friend, Landier, the forest professor, wants to help her and Yolande,
the maid, wants a share in romance. When she meets a family of goat farmers,
they tell her they have also signed out of society, but living like that is
hard work and they offer a share in that with Mona.
Mona is happy to receive, but whenever it comes to give, she
shuts down. There is no way anybody is getting anything from her. I fully
understand her shutting down demands for sex, but saying no to friendship, care
or help to help herself?
I suspect that the angle Varda was aiming for is how
vulnerable Mona is and how she bravely defends herself from people who want to
take advantage of her. In this light all the people she encounters are not
really interested in her, but what she can do for them, even if it is just to
make them feel better with themselves. Altruism in this light is aimed at oneself
with no real interest for the person you are trying to help. True, several of
the people Mona meets are selfish people and has a personal agenda and some of
them are real creeps. But is that so entirely wrong, to have personal purpose
to so something for another person? And frankly, some of those characters were
genuinely good and decent people, so I do not agree with this reading.
The way I read it, Mona represents a type of person who
wants to receive but never give, who never offer to invest anything, even to
her own benefit if it means she has to commit, give or make an effort. For her
any obstacle is resolved with refusal and escape. She is free, yes, nothing ties
her down, but that life choice destroys her. The goatherder is perfectly right
when he predicts this outcome. The price of disconnecting from society is that
you must do everything on your own and that is very hard work.
Technically, Varda presents the movie almost like a documentary.
From time to time, the characters Mona meets break the fourth wall and talk directly
to the camera, about their choices and views. It seems odd, but it is also an
interesting move and rather than making it more realistic, it gives the movie
an almost fantastic element that makes this more of a fable than realism.
Agnes Varda made interesting movies in her career and some
of them are on the List. While “Vagabond” won a lot of prices, I do not think
it is one of her better movies. I think she wanted to drive an agenda with this
movie, and I do not think she succeeded. At least not the way she intended.
I tend to agree. I love the work of Agnes Varda, but this is probably my least favorite of her films. Mona seems like a complete zero--she adapts to whatever she is next to and has no actual personality of her own. It might be interesting in a "look at what she has to do to survive" kind of way, but I don't feel a lot of pity or empathy for her.
ReplyDeleteI'll be interested in your take on Rosetta when you get there. There's a similar feel, but the differences are all the difference.
That is definitely a problem, I am simply not that interested in Mona. She grated on me and I feel more annoyed with her than the people she meets.
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