Richard Linklater's Before Sunset: Walking and Chewing 2
Published July 22, 2004
The cheesiest thing in romantic movies is often the montage sequence that shows the stars falling in love. They stroll through the park or along the shore, share a meal tête-à-tête, and though we see that they're totally absorbed in each other's conversation, we aren't ourselves given to know what they're saying. (Not that we'd be likely to hear it over the music.) Last year's Something's Gotta Give offers a classically bad example. How are we supposed to respond, what are our faces actually supposed to be doing, while Diane Keaton laughs and laughs at Jack Nicholson's jokes that we can't hear? The movie flashes the international symbol for "falling in love," a symbol without dimensions, because bare recognition is adequate to writer-director Nancy Meyers's purposes. Jack & Diane walk, talk, fall in love; you get the picture.
In his 1995 movie Before Sunrise writer-director Richard Linklater goes all the way in the other direction. Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy as college students Jesse and Céline meet on a train approaching Vienna and on an impulse get off and spend the evening together in the city. Linklater daringly follows them around all night as they talk and talk, flirt and have sex, and then part, promising to meet again in six months but otherwise exchanging no contact information. Linklater doesn't use conventional devices to push the romance, he lets the dialogue and the actors carry the entire burden. He doesn't even hint at whether they'll show up in six months, whether the night had a future.
Before Sunrise is an interesting experiment. Linklater's insistence on naturalistically replicating the two young people's experience of a single night is inherently in tension with the urgent romanticism of this kind of movie. (The kind you see in American movies from World War II, like The Clock (1945) in which Robert Walker as a soldier on leave meets Judy Garland in Penn Station and spends the day with her; the two bond so intensely they get married right away.) Linklater has called Before Sunrise a "romance for realists," which suggests that for him the movie is most alive in the tension between the naturalistic technique and the romantic effect.
I can respect him for going so far, saying, essentially, I'm not going to use movie tricks, I'm going to show you exactly what it would look, sound, and feel like for a young man and woman to click in this random way. But an experiment can be valuable without being successful, and I for one was not eagerly awaiting Before Sunset, which is a sequel to the first movie, set nine years later when Jesse is a novelist on a book tour talking up the fictional version of that earlier night that he has turned into a best seller, and Céline shows up, and they walk and talk in the brief time before his flight out of Paris. (In the Salon interview linked to above, Linklater jokes that Before Sunset is "the lowest-grossing film to ever spawn a sequel.")
- Richard Linklater's Before Sunset: Walking and Chewing 2
- Published: July 22, 2004
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- Section: Video
- Filed Under: Video: Art House, Video: Drama, Video: Romantic
- Writer: Alan Dale
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Comments
Thank you for such a thoughtful comment. Your point about European women's mixing of soulfulness and earthiness is interesting, but I think you yourself are making unfair assumptions, in your use of the words "sordid" and "pathetic." Earthiness has always been a quality I've enjoyed in female friends, but I still think Delpy's character is too coy and romantic in a movieish way to make it convincing. And in any case I said "with whom he can communicate perfectly" in contrast to "exotic" not the fact that she speaks frankly about sex. I wasn't talking about WHAT she says but simply that although she has a heavy French accent her English is otherwise flawless. There's almost no realism in the movie in terms of the difficulty of communicating across languages. That's part of what makes it romantic. Linklater believes in eternal love at first sight and all that.
Which is a lot more than you can say for Flaubert. When you write that Before Sunset should be "bundled" with Mme. Bovary, I assume it's for the stark contrast. (I agree the comices agricoles couldn't possibly be more astringent.) Well, if you think Richard Linklater works on a level equal to Charlotte Bronte and Flaubert you should be e-mailing him not me!
Thanks again for writing.
--Well, if you think Richard Linklater works on a level equal to Charlotte Bronte and Flaubert you should be e-mailing him not me!
Goodness, I guess that was an extravagant claim, wasn't it? One does tend to get hyperbolic after viewing a film past 10 pm. And yes, of course the bundling would be for the stark contrast. Flaubert is essential to human life, but his Emma is ultimately two-dimensional -- one of the loveliest unsympathetic characters in literature whose complexity is formal, not human. (Her shallow sentimentality regarding Berthe her daughter; her hypocrisy when doing work for the poor, for whom she cared not the snap of her finger; the cold calculation towards money at the end; her inability ultimately to love people rather than things - she was selfishness and illusions incarnate.) While "Before Sunset" is on a far smaller scale than Flaubert, the richness of Celine and the mutuality of the two characters do a lot to mitigate, for example, the selfish staling domesticity of Leon and Emma. A scrap of Venetian velvet versus an enormous tapestry of this vanity fair which the Chinese call "the realm of crimon dust."
-- There's almost no realism in the movie in terms of the difficulty of communicating across languages. That's part of what makes it romantic. Linklater believes in eternal love at first sight and all that.
Ah, I must plead personal bias there, since Chinese was my mother tongue and German that of my partner's, and our language in common is English. So of course I would need to think that all romantic intercultural communication is infallibly crystalline. ^^ Joking aside, Linkwater has his commercial considerations, so too much play on intercultural complexity would not do. Moreover, many Europeans are indeed quite well-versed in English down to our idiom and habits, and he took care to show that Celine lived in NY for years and works on international issues (for example, going to India) where English is the working language. And then there are the "bomb/bum" "messy/merci" moments. So Linkwater is somewhat grounded on that communication issue.
But I don't want to cavil any more, since anyone game enough to love James in his magnificent later phase is my buddy. (I've translated two pages of the Spoils of Poynton into Chinese thus far; well, that's more the middle period i suppose - in Chinese one can grammatically eschew subjects and causality, so that is very handy, but on the other hand I may have to slice his sentences into halves or even thirds. Quite bloody.)
Here's what is important - I enjoyed reading you, and think that Linkwater should make his next sequel on the perils of intercultural communication between Celine and Jesse after years togeter - and its rewards. In my own personal case we have always known we can grossly misunderstand each other, and so we always speak plainly and explore all of our assumptions. And actually we probably avoid more misunderstanding than many couples supposedly from the same background. For one thing, we both grew up watching Japanese renditions of "Sans Famille" and "Heidi" - I in Taiwan, he in Germany, even though he did not know that it was Japanese. Linkwater can probably have a fieldtrip with that.
While it wouldn't be true to say I've never received such a detailed, absorbing, personal response to my reviews, I can say I don't get them often enough. And it always makes my day when I do. You broke right through the isolation that calcifies the writer's life, you brought the world into my skull. Thank you. Please tell everyone you know to read me.













--She comes across as an educated American boy's fantasy--an exotic girl who talks dirty and puts out but with whom he can communicate perfectly.
I am Chinese-American but have lived in Switzerland and am married to a German, and I happen to know many European women who have facets to their personalities much akin to those of Celine's from this movie - and many of them are quite beautiful also, even if not in that particular soulful slurred Botticelli way of Delpy's. And one of the most endearing things about many of these people is their irreverent mix of intellect and earthiness - so yes, someone might toss her tresses and follow up on Schopenhauer musings with an off-color joke. Because they don't see why talking about S/M and "pussy" would make one sordid - an unfortunate assumption many of my compatriots, including the intelligent author of the above article, share. So I would respectfully request that you consider reexamining your premise about her character being a pathetic American male fantasy.
I find your approach to Linkwater's balance between naturalism and romanticism useful. And would like to expound upon why "Before Sunrise" captures people falling in love with as much precision and poignancy as, let us say, the great love scenes from world literature: for example, the much-maligned "Jane Eyre," where the mercurial exchanges are really utterly unpredictable and show Rochester and Jane to gradually shed conventions and speak as if they were "before the chair of Judgment." "Before Sunset" does the same - it's not just a random mundane mall conversation. It also acts as wondrous foil for scenes such as the agricultural competition where Rudolph courts Emma in "Madame Bovary" - a scene whose scalpeling shows so much hypocrisy and lust-driven egotism between two human beings with perfect misunerstanding that it's more than enough to put a cynic off love forever. "Before Sunset" should be bundled with "Madame Bovary" - that's how strong an endorsement I am making.
Alas, my wrists hurt so the rest of my defense would have to wait for now.