Sunday, June 9, 2024

The Films of Celine Sciamma: An Introduction

 


INTRODUCTION

             Director Celine Sciamma is a modern cinematic vanguard of Feminist French filmmaking. Her inspiring work consistently challenges the parameters of the patriarchal mechanism of masculine moviemaking. This boundary pushing has given us a coming-of-age trilogy, a film centered around motherhood, and another that epitomizes the phrase “love lies longing”. In this, albeit still short filmography, Sciamma not only challenges the audience with what they should be looking at, but why they should care. In the confection of cinema, Sciamma creamily marbles together theme, story, and dialogue unlike anyone else, taking additional care in incorporating intricate flavors of allegorical political complexity that are refreshingly at the forefront of the palette, while making the audience dreamily contemplative before they swallow. It is because of this longingly nostalgic meditation, that Celine Sciamma is the next subject in my director deep dives; covering all her auteur films.[1]




BACKGROUND

Born in Nov 1978, Celine Sciamma was introduced to film by her grandmother and her love of old Hollywood. By the time that she was a teenager, she was going to her local theater three times a week, clearly part of cinema’s cult. Sciamma originally envisioned herself as either a screenwriter or a critic, but not a director, stating:  “Directing just seemed like too precarious a profession, too much a male-only preserve.”    This changed when she got a chance to direct her first film, the one she originally wrote after Grad school at La Femis. 

Sciamma has always been mesmerized and confident in the power of cinema to capture an audience and reflect culture in different ways. In a 2021 interview with The Observer, Sciamma extrapolates on the power of film to be endlessly interpreted; believing that because the audience changes, films are different each time we go back to them.  She recounts the interpretation of a sex scene in Water Lillies, and she is struck by two things: One, through a more contemporary lens she considers what she shot now, a rape, rather than the feminine universality of “first time bad sexual encounters”. Secondly, that the female aggression that follows is more widely accepted and embraced now than when it was originally shot.

Recognizing the power of cinema to be a political tool, Sciamma became a founding member of the 50/50 by 2020 movement, a group of French filmmakers and industry professionals advocating for gender parity by 2020. While this mission is sadly still ongoing, Sciamma and others that uphold this disparity in egalitarian common sense as a blight upon the industry, have helped to develop intimacy coordinator positions, assisted women on contract negotiations and the implementation of inclusion riders. “Cinema is always political” Sciamma states “And women making films about women is a political act. (Oumano 2011).

This political conviction carries through to her criticism of the industry itself. In 2018, she and acting muse Adele Haenel walked out of the 45th Cesar Awards, an award she previously won for Water Lillies in 2014, because the award was given to Roman Polanski; a director in American exile because he faces sexual assault charges of a minor in Los Angeles. Sciamma and Haenel shouting “Bravo pedophilia” as they left. This criticism of terrible men is continued in the thematic messaging of her overall work.




THEMES

              Having a foundation in Feminist scholarship, a majority of political and social principles are woven into Sciamma’s cinematic tapestry. One of the strongest threads that is carried through her work is that of “The female gaze.” The female Gaze is a response to the literary criticism of “The male Gaze”. An example of the normalization of maleness and masculinity within a patriarchal system, “the male gaze” is the assumption that the lens of the camera is always gendered male, and will, by default, present the male perspective as the lens by which the audience will experience the story. This cisgendered masculine focus is also often heteronormative and objectively sexist when women are the subject of its regard. Sciamma regularly employs its opposite. She not only presents the narrative proscenium through a female perspective, but one that provides and presents women having agency, acceptance and nuance. One that is character forward in orientation.

            More broadly however, “The female gaze” is unfortunately not framed as Sciamma and others of her ilk have presented.  The term’s larger breadth is simplistically understood as “The view a female filmmaker brings to the process that is different than their male counterpart.” This unfortunately paints women as a singular monolith without the deeply complex verisimilitude that intersectional feminism strives to maintain. This “female gaze” then gets misinterpreted and thusly appropriated to promote the patriarchy. This creates the same problematic gaze just with a different subject: men. Girls and women are still socialized to their problematic sexist messages of bodily focused male relationship centered validity, but through this misconception this objectification becomes a “choice”. This is the result of the continued effect of the focus on Randian Libertarian ideals of individuality that distort the reality of systemic inequality by perceiving them through the lens of “free and equal choice.” Without interrogating or even allowing the agency they need to make that decision in the first place; this lack of acknowledgement of cultural, social, and economic differences, and the intersectionally compounding nature of their consequences, allows for the dismantling of the social support latticework.    

            The intentionally malformed system that teaches girls and women to celebrate “the power” given to them by their patriarchal jailers, are crumbs from the feast on the table of misogyny. Conditioning women to embrace the empowerment behind their own objectification, is not just a mechanism of social control for them but also promotes the active policing of [usually] heterosexual men on which they typically exercise that power; thereby maintaining the status quo. To that understanding, the essays in this series will be feminist forward in its analysis; each film focusing on a variety of feminist scholars. Classical scholars like Simone de Beauvoir, bell hooks and Audre Lorde will lay the foundation for a lot of arguments. While some films require more obscure resources like Julia Kristeva, others need a more contemporary framework from the likes of Helana Darwin, Peggy Orenstein, Roxanne Gay, Shanita Hubbard and Noelle McAfree.

            Through her coming-of-age trilogy (Water Lilies, Tom Boy, and Girlhood) Sciamma evokes hooks (1996):

“Movies remain the perfect vehicle for the introduction of certain ritual rites of passage that come to stand for the quintessential border crossing for everyone who wants to take a look at the difference and the different without to having to experientially engage “the other”… Movies not only provide a narrative for specific discourses of race, sex and class, they provide a shared experience, a common starting point from which diverse audiences can dialogue about these charged issues. (p2-3)  

With added flairs of gender fluidity and sexual identity, Sciamma’s teenage triptych centers “the other” from the ancillary, placing it subjectively in the forefront from their perspective.

            Audre Lorde’s essay “Uses of the Erotic” becomes important in the analysis of Sciamma’s 2019 feature: A Portrait of a Lady on Fire. The way that Lorde (2004) reframes the understanding of the term “erotic” as a source of lesbian existent power speaks to the character motivations in the film. While using Kristeva (2018), allows for the expanse of the film’s Greek tragedy allegory through the myth of Orpheus. This leads to a dismantling of the sexual binary through the evocation of Helana Darwin’s (2022) Redoing Gender, thereby broadening the film’s messaging to a contemporary point, regardless of its period setting.

Finally, Petite Maman challenges and subverts gender norms akin to a Friedanian analysis. However, using the analysis provided by hooks, de Beauvoir, Orenstein and a few others, it illustrates a complexity that challenges the misogynistic roles of wives and mothers that women still find difficult to circumvent.  Together, Sciamma’s Cinematic schema is one that not only teaches about feminism through a female gaze, it is a collective amalgamation of feminist theory “from margin to center” (hooks 2000:xv).



    

CONCLUSION

            Celine Sciamma’s work vacillates from being richly complex in its decadence, to simplistically rustic in its direct and uncompromising frankness. Every frame challenges the audience to contemplate the shot choice and give a reason as to why they are seeing what she is showing them.  While other lesser filmmakers, made inert by the shackles of the male gaze, continue to churn out misogynistic drivel that only lines the pockets of male centered heterosexual prosecutors, Sciamma decides to give you another perspective. She instead gives voice to the constantly silenced, and agency to a variety of marginalized groups beyond the placating table scraps of the oppressors.    

 

REFERENCES

Darwin, Helana 2022. Redoing Gender: How Nonbinary Gender Contributes Toward Social Change New York: Palgrave MacMillan

hooks, bell 1996. Reel to Real: Race Class and Sex at the Movies New York: Routledge

_________2000. Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center (2nd ed) Cambridge: South End Press

Kristeva, Julia 2018. Passions of our Time  New York: Columbia University Press

Lorde, Audre 2004. Sister Outsider: Essays and Speeches Berkeley Crossing Press

Oumano, Elena 2011. Cinema Today: A Conversation with 39 Filmmakers Around the World New York: Reuters University Press

 



[1]  Those films that she has both written and directed