Tuesday, July 9, 2024

The Films of Celine Sciamma: Water Lilies

 


The first film in my analysis of the films of Celine Sciamma, is the coming-of-age drama, Water Lilies. In this debut, Sciamma’s shot composition weaves a cinematic tapestry that heralds her as an up-and-coming auteur. Inter-stitched with a gender and sexually fluid color palette, Sciamma constructs a female gaze that captures the tumultuously turbulent acrimony of adolescence, where bourgeoning desire threatens to unravel fragile friendships. Water Lilies is the first in a loose trilogy about the slow transition out of childhood (along with Tomboy, and Girlhood). The production of this freshman film supports the consistent albeit mixed feminist messaging the director will be known for; however, upon greater reflection, some of the film’s specific sequences and overall choices may not have aged well in hindsight.

 


PLOT

When young Marie goes to a synchronized swim meet to support her best friend, she unexpectedly becomes enthralled with Floriane (Adele Haenel). As Marie gets more and more drawn in by Floriane’s charm and attention, she begins to question her sexuality, straining the relationship she has with her best friend who is also on a journey of sexual discovery. This film reminds us that regardless of the romantic path one takes, no matter how many twists and turns it makes, all roads lead to heartache.

 

HISTORICAL CONTEXT

            To understand the historical impact of Water Lilies, both the production and the film’s setting need to be interrogated. Due to films being a human cultural product, movies become infused with the time period in which they are created. This can be seen in the technology that is used on screen, filming techniques, pop cultural references used, all the way down to the film grain and sound mixing. Each of these aspects of the industry, perceptibly or imperceptibly, leave a trace as to the film’s historical affect, like a smudgy fingerprint on glass.  Depending on the type of film being made, this can either be an avenue or a barrier to the story being told. Sciamma’s first film taking place contemporaneously with the time period of the film’s production, allows it to avoid any complicated temporal anachronisms that are possible in period pieces or future (set) films. Thus, Water Lilies production and the film’s setting represent French Independent cinema, and the sexual politics of the late 2000’s

            Gay and sexual politics of the late 2000’s

During the writing and the development of Water Lilies there were transformative events in the LGBTQAI+ community. Sciamma, herself a lesbian GenXer, understands the difficulty in navigating the sexual politics of an identity that, during the time that she was a teenager, was not only less accepted, but abhorred. Thus, given this context, Water Lilies is both subversive for the time, and a beacon for the rights, representation and acceptance that was to come.

            The gender and sexual politics of the late 00’s was a period of growing pains. The white heterosexual hegemony was weaning slightly. Thus, fearful of losing that power, there was an attempt at the clawing rollback of gay rights in the states (California passing Proposition 8 making Gay marriage illegal) and abroad. In France, civil partnerships had been made legal in 1999 which, at the time, felt like a segregationist tactic of “separate but equal.” On the surface, these bills would give those that filed for domestic partnerships the same rights as a heterosexual couple outside of the name. However, these exclusionary policies were not only used as a social buffer between gays, lesbian and “the straights”- it outwardly misrepresented a cultural tacit rejection of anything that was non heterosexual.

            In Sociology, there is a term called cultural lag. This is the understanding that when a behavior, object or idea is introduced or implemented into a society or culture, there is an unspecified amount of time during which cultural acceptance is developed before it is implemented into the Bureaucratic processes of the social structure.  Technology is usually the easiest example of this: the internet existed before it became a cultural necessity. Yet, because of the power imbalance between those who hold high status positions in valued social institutions (military Governments and Economy) and the people whom they are supposed to serve, there is an extra barrier to the implementation of change regardless of its cultural acceptance. This is the impasse that sexual politics found itself in during the late 2000’s.

 Even in 2007, most of the world’s population was either supportive of or neutral towards another person’s sexuality. Yet, those in power were resistant to the will of their people and consistently pushed back against the efforts of sexual equality. This pushback was usually couched in the same rhetoric of neutrality using it to keep individuals in the proverbial “closet” or “on the DL" to limit public presentations of their identity; effectively using the rhetoric of ambivalence as a shield from criticism. Though, it is hard to accept that anyone who goes out of their way to deny the personhood of another group is uncaring. Therefore, the 2007-2008 resistance to gay rights was the product of the powerful’s persnickety perniciousness to shore up their worldview in the levees of institutional authority, indicating not only their discrimination but admitting to the fragility of their own values.

This tug of war against the people and the powerful over sexual politics has caused a “seesawing” effect on the validation of Non heterosexual identities and everything under the LGBTQAI+ banner. In addition to the 2008 California law mentioned above, the US federal government was also under the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), signed into law back in 1997 that defined marriage as only between one man and one woman. This was later attempted to be codified by the Bush administration in 2004 with the Marriage protection Amendment that died in congress. Later, the Obama Administration supported bills in congress that would weaken DOMA, eventually being reversed through the US Supreme Court decision in Obergefell V. Hodges that saw Gay marriage legalized in 2015. It was with this landmark decision that there was finally an alignment between the law and the cultural acceptance of sexual identities outside of the vanilla hetero/cis normativity.

 However, as the United States has flirted with fascism with the presidency of Donald Trump, we’ve witnessed the end of federal protections for reproductive rights for women. Roe v. Wade being repealed just shy of its 50-year anniversary. The court (with 3 new Trump appointees at the time) ultimately overturned the 1973 decision by questioning its rationalization around privacy. A rationalization that was also used in Obergefell due to the precedence established in Roe; making the former now vulnerable to appeal. This is happening while a majority of Americans still support Gay rights and same sex relationships. Yet, recent and relentless Conservative attacks have fueled public skepticism and waned support for trans and nonbinary people in the US.  

Being of French nationality, it is reasonable to assume that Sciamma wasn’t impacted by these contradictions in the States. Although, historically France has been far more progressive than the US when it comes to issues of sexuality and gender, still, between 2012 and 2013 the battle between the conservative and socialist parties in France were ambivalent about same sex marriage; ultimately solidifying France as a liberal nation with the passage of the Gay marriage bill in 2013, 6 years after the release of the film.

As mentioned at the beginning of this section, because Water Lilies drew upon the director’s own experiences, the revelation of attraction and expression is inherently framed from a Gen X perspective during a far more conservative time, even in France. Thus, a lot of the film, especially the intimacy between Marie and Floriane, happens behind closed doors, in locker rooms, and secret places in public parks. While this is typical of youthful sexual transgressions regardless of identity (in part because young adults do not have access to many private spaces without parental or adult supervision) these practices were necessary in the gay and lesbian subculture during times when expression of such an identity was met with criminal prosecution, violence and even death. Sciamma deftly illustrates not only the confusion of an emerging unbridled sexuality, but the added vexation of navigating the underground codes of sexual identities and behaviors that are not accepted by the cisgendered vanilla sex breeders.

            


            Production

           The inspiration for Water Lilies came from Sciamma’s experiences with the sport of synchronized swimming. The original French title, which translates into “birth of the octopus” was later changed for an international release. Sciamma felt that the term ‘water lilies’ was an insightful analogy to the way that female synchronized swimmers need to present themselves: athletic and strong but with a performative femininity. Water lilies being both of the soil and water, thriving in the silt of rivers and lakes, with resiliency hardy enough to break the surface tension of the water to flower above. In either case, with water lilies or French synchronized swimmers, the real labor underwater is never seen.  

            Being an independent and a considerably low budget film, not much else is known about the production of the film, beyond the knowledge that, sometime after this film wrapped, Sciamma and Haenel began a romantic relationship. In hindsight, considering that Sciamma and Haenel met on the set of Water Lilies, and the age gap between them (Sciamma was between 29-30 and Haenel was 17-18 years old at the time they met), calls for a reexamination of the film through the framing of power.

Regardless of when the romantic relationship between Sciamma and Haenel began, the initial cultivation of their relationship was not one of equal power. And while these power dynamics are indeed fluid and can change, a relationship that has a foundation of an imbalance of power is hard to disrupt, especially when that imbalance of power in a professional relationship is reinforced by the imbalance of the age gap between them. Consider the difficulties in the shift in power dynamics between parents and children, and how even adult children kowtow to parents and their desires when that subjugation is no longer required, nor beneficial. This imbalance became foundational in the initial relationship between Sciamma and Haenel that complicates a feminist reading of the film. An example of this is Sciamma’s thoughts on the sex and nudity of the characters that are supposed to be below the age of consent (even though all of the actors portraying the teens were over the age of 18):

"In the casting, I told each girl the whole scenario, including that scene in which one girl deflowers the other. You can't just say to a girl, 'if you're naked, that's your character.' No, it's her body. So I was always honest. I said that I would not betray them, that I would not take anything from them, that they should give me something. By itself. If they wanted to participate, they knew how far they had to go. I was surprised that they were immediately excited. But the story was really about them, they felt connected to it. And those parents were just as excited. They even helped me to lie to the government because I had given them a clean version of the script to convince them. The parents supported that story," Sciamma recalled.[1]    

 

On the surface this is very inclusive and provides the girls with the agency and autonomy to collaboratively create the story that Sciamma wanted to tell. However, reframe this statement with the knowledge of Sciamma’s and Haenel’s subsequent relationship, and through this lens, these statements seem predatory.

            Additionally, using the framing of Sciamma’s and Haenel’s relationship, the praise for the film becoming the template for a feminist female gaze in filmmaking is also tainted. Throughout the film, Floriane (Haenel) is the subject of Marie’s desire, often illustrated through the lens of the camera. Yet, because it is Sciamma behind the camera, and she is the person whom inevitably chooses which shots to use from hours of footage, any image that presents Floriane’s sexuality, regardless of the presumed agency that is presented, again seems predatory. It is difficult to believe, given both the final product and the history of filmmaking, that Sciamma wasn’t sexualizing Haenel well-before they became a couple. Thus, it is odd for a film to be praised for its depiction of girls, women and the agency afforded to them to express their sexuality, when the person who was ultimately responsible for constructing that narrative was objectifying one of them at the same time.

If I can be afforded some latitude for speculation, one of the reasons that this framing isn’t more commonly lauded at this film is due to the same sex nature of the relationship. Currently, as of this writing, allegations of sexual misconduct have been leveed against author Neil Gaiman. Gaiman (similar to Sciamma and Haenel) began a relationship with a 20-year-old victim after meeting them at a book signing 2 years prior. Almost instantaneously, Gaiman is “being canceled.”, and rightfully so. Yet, Sciamma remains a pillar of feminist filmmaking. A partial explanation for this could be the simplicity of popularity. Gaiman is more popular than Sciamma and thus garners more public attention. Additionally, the relationship between Sciamma and Haenel began and ended without attention or fanfare before social media became a factor in a majority of celebrity lives. Finally, one cannot discount the additional factor of the common age gaps and complicated entanglement of same sex relationships; many of which are based in a foundation of sexual mentorship. In this context, we can understand how Sciamma’s possible transgressions are made invisible, but no less problematic.

 


SOCIAL ANALYSIS

            Water Lilies is a story about the blossoming of sexuality in teenage girls and the emotional torrent that accompanies its revelation. Many of the sociological themes that this film encircles are ones of learning, self-discovery and introspection. Each of the three protagonists have to navigate this new (to them) gender and sexual landscape, coming to different solutions, conclusions and revelations between them, themselves and the rest of the world. To understand this further, the concepts of gender socialization, the eroticization of youth and the intersections of love and sex need to be examined.

            Gender Socialization

             Socialization is rudimentally defined as a social learning process, begins before birth and contains multitudes: the learning of both the self, and society; its rules, regulations and ways of acceptable behavior. This process needs to be engrossingly all-encompassing because it is used as a mechanism of social control. The internalization of its process and learned socially acceptable behavior(s) maintains the social order by constructing a law-abiding productive member of society. Yet, since most societies value patriarchal and white supremacist rule, the social order that emerges, and the learning process that is developed to ensure its reproduction, becomes inherently racist and misogynistic.

            Gender Socialization: the process by which individuals understand what it means to be male, female, and trans, along the gender spectrum within a particular society. Some societies see and expand upon the gendered spectrum, while others, most others, organize around a traditional, exclusionary binary.  Through the gender binary, gender stereotypes and assumptions emerge as concrete facts: boys are boys and girls are girls, to eventually become men and women.  Girls get the message that their value is chiefly located in their body and their relationship with boys and men; learning to cultivate their bodies, dreams and desires around the needs of others. It is from this that they are convinced they only find worth. If they dare to dream for themselves, they are consistently sanctioned and pressured to return to behaviors of subservience.

 Under such surveillance women lose their identity, becoming strangers to themselves (de Beauvoir 2011). Any identity outside of the roles of being wives and mothers is an identity which is perceived as one that a girl/woman steals for themselves. However, if these two identity conditions are mandatory and must be fulfilled prior to anything else, what is then framed as stealing, is instead a conditional perk of incarceration. Female childhood and adolescence are seething with the rage against their imprisonment in these roles, often thrashing themselves against the bars of their social prison, inflicting self-harm (de Beauvoir 2011).              

Because girls and women are valued in their bodies through the binary, the detention of society’s daughters begins around the subject of sex.  Beyond the simple objectification of women as sex objects or vessels for the next generation (through reproduction) this valuation frames women’s existence as being in service to others, typically men. Therefore, all these mechanisms by which girls and women are policed, are for the benefit of men. Laura Carpenter (2005) discusses this through the prism of virginity loss.

According to Carpenter (2005), girls and boys are socialized to perceive virginity differently. While boys are socialized to see their virginity as a stigma, something that needs to be gotten rid of as soon as possible, girls are socialized to see their virginity as a gift. However, it is not a gift that the girls give to themselves, to indicate body autonomy and agency, but a gift to their (presumed) heterosexual partner. This places undo attention and value on female virginity to the point that the perception of a girl/women’s morality is tied to whether or not they have had sex (Valenti 2009).

Sciamma inverts this importance of virginity in the film through Floriane, who is a virgin but has a slutty reputation among boys. When she is no longer able to delay the advances of one of her many male suitors, and to avoid the humiliation of being discovered as a virgin, she convinces Marie to deflower her through digital stimulation/penetration. This non heterosexual act is done in the service of men, specifically to give Floriane access to male power. Floriane does this without any reluctance or consideration for Marie’s feelings, which end up being hurt through Floriane’s emotional manipulation and lack of compassion.    

Since women get the message that their value is in their bodies, girls and women often conclude that one way to glean power, autonomy and authority is through the patriarchal bargain- when women lean into patriarchal, and ultimately unequal systems of power for the stability and security that behavior will provide. This is done in part through girls and women recognizing their body as currency. Yet, while girls and women can wrestle away power from men and the patriarchy in general, this behavior, even though it is framed as a subversion, or a rebellion, it is still in the service of men. The control that women assert over their heterosexual partners and the general domestic sphere is purposefully designed to provide men with women to support them. The patriarchal system conditions men to not be socialized to a variety of basic domestic duties while sanctioning women more harshly for those same behaviors. Thus, to avoid being sanctioned by others (and perceived as a “bad” wife and “mother” the roles from which Society draws girls and women’s value) many women feel pressure to exhibit control over the home and participate in this patriarchal bargain; convincing themselves that it is the only way to access power. This is contrary to the truth that the patriarchal structure conditions boys and men into a state of arrested development (often framing girlfriends and wives as “mothers they can fuck”) which then conditions women to fill/exploit that weakness to gain power that they were denied by virtue of being girls/women. Then, because this system is also misogynistic, even when women do the very things society tells them they need to do to gain value, they are still sanctioned for it. This is typically done through slut shaming or framing their behavior as manipulative and controlling.

Water Lilies shows Floriane as beginning to understand the patriarchal bargain and her body as currency. Not only does she understand the value of a sexual reputation in getting interest and attention from men, from which she can gain status, but the way that she uses access to her body as “payment” for services rendered (Giving Marie a kiss after she deflowers Floriane for the purpose of male attention). Also, by framing this as a transaction, she keeps an emotional distance from these behaviors and unfortunately does not recognize or care about the emotional fallout of her actions; for Marie, or anyone around her.  Floriane’s use of erotic capital is the mechanism by which these misogynistic traps of false consciousness, learned through the process of gender socialization, hurt everyone around her, regardless of gender or sexual identity.




Uses of the Erotic and The Lesbian Existence

            Because women have been taught to use their erotic capital and their bodies as currency for the support of men, this strips the inherit power of the erotic that women can use to validate themselves. According to Audre Lorde (2007) part of the social control of women in a misogynistic patriarchal system is the suppression and appropriation of the erotic, ignoring it as a source of information and power in women’s lives.  (p 53-54)

            [Women] have been warned against [the erotic] all [their] lives by the male world, which values this depth of feeling enough to keep women around in order to exercise it in the service of men, but which fears this same depth too much to examine the possibilities of it within themselves

This is especially true when looking at the way the patriarchal system discourages female friendships, often framing each other as competition for male attention. This is born out of the fragility of masculinity at the core of any misogynistic patriarchy. Because the culture has organized the value of women to be in the service of men, the latent fear that underlines this domination and oppression is the lack of value and importance men have in women’s lives. Women become instrumental to men’s lives and their livelihood (part of the mechanism to control men too) especially in heterosexual relationships to their benefit; men who are married with children report higher rates of happiness and wellness. Yet, cis/het women consistently report higher levels of health, happiness and wellness when they are unmarried and childless. This not only shows that men and women are socialized into norms and behaviors in opposition to their overall happiness, but it also consciously separates women from the source of their power; each other. The alienation and competition of women is a socially constructed mechanism of social control, because empowered women are a danger to the patriarchal social order. Their erotic power is a lifeforce that can be cultivated through girls and women’s relationship to each other (Lorde 2007).

    The erotic empowerment of women through their relationships was coined by Adrianne Rich as “The lesbian Existence.” As I explained in a previous essay:

Rich exclaims:

“The Lesbian existence comprises both the breaking of a taboo and the rejection of a compulsory way of life. It is also a direct or indirect attack on male right of access to women. But it is more than these, although we may first begin to perceive it as a form of nay-saying to patriarchy, an act of resistance. It has of course included role playing, self-hatred, breakdown, alcoholism, suicide, and intrawoman violence; we romanticize at our peril what it means to love and act against the grain, and under heavy penalties; and lesbian existence has been lived (unlike, say, Jewish or Catholic existence) without access to any knowledge of a tradition, a continuity, a social underpinning. The destruction of records and memorabilia and letters documenting the realities of lesbian existence must be taken very seriously as a means of keeping heterosexuality compulsory for women, since what has been kept from our knowledge is joy, sensuality, courage, and community, as well as guilt, self-betrayal, and pain”

As the term "lesbian" has been held to limiting, clinical associations in its patriarchal definition, female friendship and comradeship have been set apart from the erotic, thus limiting the erotic itself. But as we deepen and broaden the range of what we define as lesbian existence, as we delineate a lesbian continuum, we begin to discover the erotic in female terms: as that which is unconfined to any single part of the body or solely to the body itself, as an energy not only diffuse but, as Audre Lorde (2007) has described it, omnipresent in "the sharing of joy, whether physical, emotional, psychic," and in the sharing of work; as the empowering joy which "makes us less willing to accept powerlessness, or those other supplied states of being which are not native to me, such as resignation, despair, self-effacement, depression, and self-denial.” (p54)[2]

            In Water Lilies, it is heavily implied through genre conventions (of the coming-of-age story tropes) that Floriane, like Marie, is trying to understand and navigate her own sexuality; her eroticization by cis/het boys and men allowing her to experiment. This “freedom” is afforded to her because she is a cis/het fem presenting female. An identity whose sexuality, and its exploration, has been co-opted and appropriated by both cis/het men and the porn industry. Because of this, girls and women can more easily experiment with non-heterosexual behaviors openly and in public without much sanction, as long as it is framed as being performative for male attention. This causes many gay and bisexual girls to go through a period of trying to pass as straight (Orenstein 2016). It is possible that this is what Floriane is contemplating and working through in the film, without an understanding of how her actions are affecting others around her. It comes down to whether the audience interprets her actions as being with calculated malicious intent, or as confusion, ignorance and oblivion to her own charisma.

  


CONCLUSION

            Celine Sciamma’s debut film, Water Lilies, is the opening volley in a coming-of-age trilogy that investigates social, gender and sexual development through an attempted feminist lens using the female gaze. Sciamma mostly achieves this with dialogue, genuine reactions from actors and shot compositions that try to get inside the mind of teenage Parisian girls as they navigate the trials of gender socialization and tribulations of their “flowering” sexual identity. Yet, Sciamma’s later relationship with one of the film’s stars, reveals that like the history of the male gaze in cinema, the female gaze can also be predatory.

 

REFERENCES

de Beauvior, Simone 2011. The Second Sex New York: Vintage Books.

Carpenter, Laura M. 2005. Virginity Lost An Intimate Portrait of First Sexual Experiences. New York: New York University Press.

Lorde, Audre 2007.  Sister Outsider Essays and Speeches by Audre Lorde Berkely: Crossing Press

Orenstein, Peggy 2016. Girls and Sex: Navigating the Complicated New Landscape. New York: Harper Press

Valenti, Jessica 2009.  The Purity Myth: How America’s Obsession with Virginity is Hurting Young Women Berkely: Seal Press.