the touch never to be
felt
by Douglas Messerli
Robert Bresson
(screenwriter and director) Pickpocket / 1959, USA 1963
Pickpocket is one of Bresson's greatest films, although
US viewers have often described it as being stiffly-acted with scenes that
appear to be "phony." In his introduction to the Criterion release of
the film, script writer Paul Schrader explains, in part, why this film was so
meaningful to him by discussing how Bresson worked against the genre of the
crime story, and, in fact, pushed against traditional narrative techniques.
What Schrader does not describe however, is the even more disquieting relationship this film has with parts of the body, particularly the hands, which lends to the work an uneasy sensation of voyeurism. Indeed, I will go so far as to describe this film as a series of mimed sex acts, most of them homoerotic.
We
understand, moreover, the "real" action to be a portrayal of robbery.
The
situation is simple. A friend of Michel's, Jacques (Pierre Leymarie), tries to
help the out-of-work man find a job. "You're good with your hands,"
he tells Michel. But Michel demurs, preferring, so it seems, the emptiness of
his shiftless life. We later discover that he has gone as far as to steal money
from his own mother.
It
is at that moment, as the accomplice follows him, and Michel turns back to
challenge the stranger that we begin to perceive in Bresson's work that any
plot is basically laid to rest, as the director shifts instead to almost
abstract patterns that are similar to sexual "cruising." Bresson
begins, in long repetitious montages, to show us how to steal a billfold, a
watch, a purse. In most cases the pickpocket must face the person (most often a
male) directly head on, moving as closely to him as possible. The slip of the
hand into the pocket (in Bresson's telling it is usually the upper breast
pocket or the front coat pocket, seldom the back) must be supple and quick,
almost as if one were stealthfully stroking the individual without him knowing
it.
Michel's
long, thin fingers sensually dart into pockets again and again, or those same
fingers gently curl around the wrist as they remove a victim's watch. The
passing of these trophies on to the others is as sudden and lascivious, as if
they were sharing some sexual charge carried along with the objects they've
stripped from the victims.
In his public life, on the other hand, in his encounters with the detective, with Jacques, and the woman, Jeanne (Marika Green) who cares for his mother, Michel is a cold fish, arguing vaguely for a kind of anarchy in which "supermen" are permitted to behave as they like. Although it's clear he is attracted to Jeanne, he seems uncaring for her destitute situation and nonplussed by Jacques' growing love of her. Michel gains little, moreover, from his thievery. He readily gives up most of the money to his mother and would support Jeanne if he could, while living in a hovel, a room that has no reason to exist except for providing him a place to sleep—sometimes for long periods when he becomes exhausted from his acts, just as one might from sex.
On
the contrary, in public—at the races, on trains and subways, and in the lobbies
of banks where he selects his "clients"—Michel comes alive in his
search for something to put into his hands. Unlike the country priest in
Bresson's earlier movie, whose hands remain empty, in his attempts express the
miracle of life, Michel is seen desperately trying to fill up his hands,
reaching out again and again for bodies that he cannot dare touch, only to
discover fists full of watches, billfolds, and an occasional purse. As Jeanne
correctly tells him "You're not in the real world."
After
leaving Paris for a time, practicing his thievery elsewhere, Michel returns to
find Jeanne alone with a child. For the first time, Michel begins to see her
frailty and beauty, and determines to become honest. Jeanne, always the
realist, however, knows the truth: "You have to leave me and never come
back," she proclaims.
This
time his addiction leads him back to Longchamps, the racetrack where he was
first arrested. As he attempts to steal a bundle of money from a man who works
with the police, we see a different encirclement of the wrist, a handcuff
placed upon it. In prison—a place where, in fact, Michel has metaphorically
been all along—he finally comes to see the emptiness of the things he has taken
in favor of true physical contact. Jeanne appears at his cell, and the film
ends with her kissing his hands through the prison bars, representing his
possible redemption through love.
Los Angeles, February 4,
2000
Reprinted from World
Cinema Review (February 2000).