One Sings, the Other Doesn't

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One Sings, the Other Doesn't
One Sings, the Other Doesn't 1977.jpeg
Film poster
Directed byAgnès Varda
Screenplay byAgnès Varda
Produced byCiné Tamaris
StarringThérèse Liotard
Valérie Mairesse
Ali Rafie
Robert Dadiès
CinematographyCharlie Van Damme
Music byFrançois Werthmeimer
Orchidée
Distributed byCiné-Tamaris
Release date
1977 (France)
Running time
116 minutes
CountryFrance
LanguageFrench

One Sings, the Other Doesn't (French: L'une chante, l'autre pas) is a 1977 French film written and directed by Agnès Varda that focuses on the lives of two women over the span of fourteen years against the backdrop of the Women's Movement in 1970s France.

Plot[]

In 1962 Paris, Pauline (Valérie Mairesse), a 17-year-old schoolgirl studying for her baccalaureate, wanders into a gallery because she recognizes her old friend Suzanne (Thérèse Liotard) in one of the photographs displayed. Pauline learns the photographer is Suzanne’s partner, though they are not married. Pauline reconnects with the 22-year-old Suzanne, who now has two children with the photographer and is currently expecting a third. When Suzanne tells Pauline she cannot afford to have a third child, Pauline helps secure the money for an illegal abortion[1] for Suzanne. To get the money, Pauline lies to her parents about a school trip; when they find out what the money was used for, she leaves home, drops out of school, and begins working as a singer. The photographer commits suicide and, after this tragedy, Suzanne moves back to her parents’ farm, where she is looked down on for having illegitimate children.

Ten years pass before the two women are reunited again at a 1972 demonstration in Bobigny for abortion rights. Pauline, now known as Pomme (French: Apple), sings in a feminist folk group and lives with her partner Darius, a grad student she met in Amsterdam when she was herself getting an abortion. Suzanne has managed to leave her parents’ farm by teaching herself typing, and has opened a family planning clinic in Hyères. Although the two women have to part ways once more, they keep in touch by sending each other postcards. Pauline later moves to Darius’ native Iran, where they marry and Pauline becomes pregnant. When she and Darius’ relationship becomes strained, Pomme leaves Darius and returns to France, where she has the baby in Suzanne’s clinic. She lets Darius return to Iran with their infant son on the condition that he provides another child for her. A pregnant Pomme is able to go back on the road as a singer. Suzanne, after an unfulfilling relationship with a sailor, eventually marries a local doctor. The last section of the film is followed by a brief epilogue in which Pomme and Suzanne, their families, and their friends have a reunion by the sea.

Cast[]

Production[]

Production for the film took place in 1976.[2] As Pomme and Suzanne exchange letters and postcards, their words are read by the actresses in voice-over. Varda also appears as a narrator, mediating between the two women’s stories.[3] The protest where Pomme and Suzanne reconnect was a recreation of a real demonstration in France at the trial of a woman who had had an abortion after being raped.[4] For the demonstration scene, Varda had

nonactors playing demonstrators and the legendary human-rights lawyer Gisèle Halimi (who was the [case’s] defense attorney) at one point breaking through a police line to take some demonstrators into the courthouse. In the crowd, women carry banners in support of “the 343,” the prominent women—including Varda—who had signed a manifesto testifying that they had had illegal abortions, which was printed in 1971 in the influential left-of-center weekly Le nouvel observateur.[2]

Though not considered a musical, One Sings, the Other Doesn’t contains a few theatrical set pieces and musical numbers, which Varda wrote the lyrics for.[2][3] In the film’s ending scene, Suzanne’s teenaged daughter is played by Varda’s real-life daughter, Rosalie Varda-Demy.

Critical reception[]

Based on 17 reviews, the film holds a rating of 82% on review aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes.[5] In a contemporary essay for The Criterion Collection, Amy Taubin wrote that the strength of the film is “that it embraces maternity while insisting that women must have the right to decide when or if to bear children”.[2]

Roger Ebert, awarded the film four out of four stars and praised the film for its simplicity, its portrayal of the leading female characters' friendship and Varda's direction:

Varda’s title is a perfect one (and even more melodic in French: “L’une chante, l’autre pas”). Here we have them, she says: Two women, friends, and one sings and the other doesn’t, but they’ll remain friends and sisters for all of their lives. The movie’s final passages are among the best. Pomme comes with her child and friends to spend some time on the farm, and so several generations are brought together as the two friends approach the middles of their lives. There’s a picnic, and kids playing, and wine, and singing (but of too many songs), and what Varda’s doing, in a sneaky way, is making her case for feminism in a lyric voice instead of a preachy one.[6]

Justin Chang, in a glowing review wrote:

To describe Varda’s picture as an ardent tribute to the never-not-timely subjects of women’s liberation and solidarity is to risk making it sound awfully schematic. But if “One Sings, the Other Doesn’t” is something of a thesis movie, that thesis takes shape gently, with equal parts documentary grit and dreamlike evanescence.[7]

References[]

  1. ^ Abortion was not legal in France until 1975.
  2. ^ a b c d Taubin, Amy (28 May 2019). "One Sings, the Other Doesn't: Bodies and Selves". The Criterion Collection.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ a b Brown, Pat (30 May 2019). "Review: Agnès Varda's One Sings, The Other Doesn't on Criterion Blu-ray". Slant Magazine.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  4. ^ "ABORTION BATTLE PUSHED IN FRANCE". The New York Times. 24 November 1972. ISSN 0362-4331.
  5. ^ "One Sings, The Other Doesn't". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  6. ^ Ebert, Roger (March 16, 1978). "One Sings, the Other Doesn't". Chicago Sun-Times.
  7. ^ Chang, Justin (July 23, 2018). "Review: Agnès Varda's 1977 film 'One Sings, the Other Doesn't' is a charmingly offbeat rabble-rouser". Los Angeles Times.

External links[]

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