hunger and
thirst
by Douglas Messerli
Chantal Akerman (screenwriter and
director) Je tu
il elle (I you he she) / 1975

Chantal Akerman’s death by suicide
in October 2015, led me to revisit many of her films and to watch new ones,
among them Je tu il elle of 1975.
This film begins with a kind of reverse creation myth, as the filmed figure and
narrator (Akerman herself) describes her activities for six days, as she pulls
her furniture out of the small, narrow apartment she has apparently just moved
into, writes a long letter—presumably to the “tu” (perhaps the film viewers
themselves) of the film’s title—after which she crosses much of it out, lays
her manuscript in an inexplicable manner across the floor, and almost manically
spoons from a bag of sugar. At times, the narrative voice runs ahead of the
visual actions; at other moments it lags behind, creating tension. As she lies
on the mattress nude for days at a time, that first week gradually expanding to
nearly a month, what becomes apparent is that this woman is completely
self-destructive. She waits, so the narrative voice proclaims, for something to
happen which, except for a passerby staring into her window, never comes.
Finally, completely disenchanted with the life she has chosen—one
presumably of freedom and independence—the character, Julie, abandons her
cramped space and takes to the road, catching a ride with a lonely trucker with
red hair, but is otherwise nearly a Marlon Brando look-alike (Niels Arestrup).
He says very little but suggests she may want to take a nap in his bunk.
Later they visit a local bar where a TV set blares out American series’ such as
Cannon, whose characters, strangely, spout aphorisms such as “a child of fear
is the father of evil.”
The two continue of their voyage in silence, stopping by another truck
stop for dinner. Back in the truck he instructs her with quite specific details
on how to jack him off, which she does successfully. He opens up to her and
tells a sad tale of how, with children and the long hours of his job, his sex
life with his wife has waned, leaving him with nothing but quick pick-ups along
his route and endless yearnings.
In short, the truck driver relates his own anti-creation tale, one that
shall surely lead, like Julie’s own apartment isolation, to disappointment.
Certainly, this man’s idea of sexual gratification—entirely self-centered—offers
nothing to the world. Akerman frames the encounter so that we do not even see
Julie while she is pleasuring him, her existence having been wiped out in the
act.
In the third act of this film, Julie returns to her lesbian lover
(Claire Wauthion), who tells her that she cannot spend the night, yet she feeds
Julie who is now ravenously hungry and thirsty, clearly suggesting her sexual
desires as well. Critic Michael Koresky, writing for the Criterion DVD, argues
that their following ten-minute engagement in sex is nearly sexless,
representing a “complete dissociation, from narrative, from body, from life.” The New York Times critic Janet
Maslin—in what has to be one of the most disinterested reviews ever
written—describes it as an athletic tussle.

I found the long act to be one of the most graphically loving sex scenes
I have ever witnessed; the women seemed to me to be passionate in each other’s
embrace, this last scene representing a true fulfillment of the hunger and
thirst that Julie had imposed upon herself. Presumably, she will remain with
the woman she had mistakenly left. It is clear that, at last, Julie has
returned home to someone with whom she can create a life.
The closing score reconfirms this with a lovely French song, suggesting
one should “kiss whom you please.”
Los Angeles, July 10, 2016
Reprinted from Hyperallegic Weekend (August
13, 2016).
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