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La Jetee is highly experimental. Director Chris Markers unique method is telling the entire film in a series of stills. This is most unusual as a narrative device. The effect is that of captured moments, of partial glimpses something that suits the films theme perfectly. The only shot in the film that is not told in stills is the moment that the woman wakes up and opens her eyes and looks directly into the camera. The reason for this being the sole filmed sequence is not clear but the effect is lovely. Though considerably acclaimed, La Jetee was little seen until the 1990s when it was remade by Terry Gilliam as Twelve Monkeys (1995) whereupon it gained a whole new lease of life. Comparisons between La Jetee and Twelve Monkeys are interesting. Twelve Monkeys works far better as a science-fiction film. It trims some aspects of La Jetee like the trip into the far-flung future and gives greater substance in other areas like the reasons for the trip into the past. It also makes the scenes in the past less of a languid, dreamy romance and more of a tightly wound dramatic story. Despite its shorter length, La Jetee still manages to have a much more whimsical narrative, while Twelve Monkeys is tight and concise. The climax in La Jetee is more abrupt than in Twelve Monkeys only the boy witnessing his own death but its paradox twist is still powerful science-fiction. Despite his English-sounding name, Chris Marker is a Frenchman, In actuality, he was born Christian Francois Bouche-Villeneuve and is reputed to have taken his screen name from the Magic Marker pen. Over the next four decades, Marker has continued to make various short films and documentaries with a strong leftist leanings. His only other return to genre material was Level Five (1995), a peculiarly unsatisfying blend of Virtual Reality themes and a documentary deconstructing war footage.
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