Godard’s Alphaville is a concoction of love and
technology, poetry and science.
In a city that
is governed by an evil scientist, those who experience love, or grief, or even read
poetry are sentenced to death. A tragic scene suffused with endless murder and
beautiful synchronized swimmers, is displayed very matter-of-factly. The
insouciance attitude in the characters is genuine to Alphaville on account of the inhuman sensitivity that everyone in this
city is to attain. This scene specifically demonstrates the interrelation
between evil and poetry that is prominent throughout the film.
Alphaville, the
city where love is obsolete, technology plays the leading role. Ironically Alphaville is fluid with romanticism and
despair that is easily interpreted by the over-sexualized women in this city. And
it isn’t hard to predict that it is through the pursuit of love that
Alphaville’s regime is eradicated.
Anna Karina, who
plays the evil scientists’ daughter, maneuvers her way into the heart of an
“outsider”, a journalist who has come to save its citizens from the Alpha 60
dictatorship. Here, with a touch of passion and courage, the journalist who
also claims to stand for justice, hunts and kills the scientist while
consequentially destroying Alphaville itself.
-ar
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