Part I
LOCATIONS
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The Eiffel Tower: A Parisian Film Star
Nicoleta Bazgan
For a world-renowned icon that has been filmed from all angles, the Eiffel Tower remains intriguingly opaque. It still exudes an enigmatic fascination, like a film star coming from the silent era. At first glance, the immobile Tower seems to be merely a clichĂ©d image that offers a readily readable location. Yet, in a dynamic interaction with the on-screen cityscape and the cinematic audience, the Tower has constantly challenged the representation and experience of Parisian space. The monumentâs image has been actively marketed since the Eiffel Towerâs debut at the 1889 Exposition Universelle when postcards were sold underneath its great spanning arches.1 In its very first roles in newsreels, the towering landmark tested the limits of the camera. Its massive height led to the first vertical tracking shot in the history of cinema in the LumiĂšre Brothersâ Panorama pendant lâascension de la Tour Eiffel/Panorama during the Ascent of the Eiffel Tower (1897â98) and redefined the tilt in Thomas Edisonâs Panorama of the Eiffel Tower (1900). As its image is now intimately connected to the history of cinema, the very presence of the landmark on screen might be considered a cinephilic gesture in itself.
Since the Towerâs breakthrough role in RenĂ© Clairâs Paris qui dort/The Crazy Ray (1924), the monumentâs fame has grown through unforgettable performances and countless cameos. In a stunning range of films, the Parisian icon has, for example, been examined in the documentary Paris 1900 (Nicole VĂ©drĂšs, 1948), revered in Les Quatre cents coups/The 400 Blows (François Truffaut, 1959), featured in the blockbuster Taxi 2 (GĂ©rard Krawczyk, 2000) and celebrated by Hollywood in Funny Face (Stanley Donen, 1957). Over the course of its long career, the Tower has therefore acquired all the characteristics of a French film star. It enjoys dual success in mainstream and auteur cinema, with regular appearances in Hollywood films. In the national industries of tourism, fashion and cosmetics, the glamorous monument embodies a sophisticated form of Frenchness.2 On screen, numerous cameos define the Towerâs star persona as a Parisian icon capable of invoking well-established facets of the city. In more complex roles, however, the landmark fully reveals its paradoxical nature. It acts as a protagonist but also takes the place of the camera itself. Notoriously ambivalent, its body is connected to both joyful celebration and deadly seduction. Through these constitutive paradoxes, rather like all major film stars, the Tower embodies a wide range of contradictions.
As an urban icon,3 the Tower has been typecast in a âperfect fitâ4 with its off-screen image. Roland Barthes explains its magnetism in the real cityscape as a âpure â virtually empty â signâ.5 In contrast, its appearances on screen, however brief, are already invested with meaning. Even in establishing shots, the Tower cannot be solely read as a metonymical monument. Instead, it becomes a site where different facets of Paris â the city of romantic love, the city of modernity, the touristic city â are shaped through shifting meanings. The prologue of Paris, je tâaime (2006) shows a twinkling Tower at night, with fireworks that burst into a spectacular celebration, setting the audience ablaze with emotion. The gleaming beam and magical shimmer of the landmark recall that cinema, too, is light in movement. When the film title appears over this background, cinematic gaze and desire are aligned with the consumption of Paris, the city of romantic love. Although the iconic cameos of the Eiffel Tower have become a key part of its global mainstream appeal, this typecast role represents only one side of its intricate stardom.
The Eiffel Towerâs cameo as an urban icon in Paris, je tâaime (Olivier Assayas, et. al., 2006).
Through its position as both protagonist and camera, the Eiffel Tower reveals a simultaneous sense of concrete presence and subjective perception in urban space. Taking the Towerâs place, the camera as a material ghost can record the Parisian cityscape through a myriad point-of-view shots in all directions. In over-the-shoulder shots, the on-screen landmark âcutsâ the landscape using its open latticework as a frame and viewfinder. Through its architecture, the Tower merges inner and outer space, situating the visitor at once in its structure and elsewhere in the surrounding Parisian landscape, immersed in a multisensory experience. In the 15-minute short La Tour/The Tower (1928), RenĂ© Clair conveys the transformative experience of a visit to the landmark. The monumentâs symmetrical latticework cuts kaleidoscopic slices in the Parisian landscape, displaying fragmentary ways of seeing. Pans, tilts and tracking shots frame a mobile cityscape. Close-ups of the Tower reveal the tactility of the iron filigrees through startling details. The concrete materiality of the edifice and the emotional immersion in the Parisian scenery fuse objective and subjective perception, changing the experience of the city.
As a star body, the Tower appears in different scales that emphasise its tactile qualities, from a lofty silhouette to a fetishised element such as a girder, pillar, arch, elevator, platform, staircase or filigree in a technique originating from photography.6 At night, shimmering lights outline the landmark to display its electric glamour. The monumentâs tri-dimensional structure opens up a vertical labyrinth, while its platforms function as stages, mirroring the horizontal maze of the urban sprawl and public squares. Its architecture offers countless possibilities for actions to assert or contest the urban power grid.
The honourable Tower has been regularly filmed hosting official and festive events. The short newsreel Lunch on the Eiffel Tower (Topical Film Company, 1914), for example, records a sumptuous formal meal in the landmarkâs restaurant and an elevator descent showcasing the stunningly beautiful cityscape. In stark contrast, a British PathĂ© newsreel from 1912 shows Franz Reichelt testing a flying costume and jumping off the Tower to his death in front of the cameras, becoming, as François Truffaut puts it, âwithout a doubt, the first victim of cinemaâ.7 The Icarian hubris captured on screen highlights the morbid side of the monument where spectacle and danger coalesce. Since the first documentaries, the Towerâs body has thus been deeply ambivalent, torn between sensational leisure and fatal magnetism.
Connected to the broader landscape, the Tower, through its constitutive paradoxes, taps into, and frequently unsettles, the main binaries that structure cities to produce multiple layers of social, cultural, economic and affective space. The interplay between the distance and proximity to the landmark, for instance, translates into social belonging and exclusion. Numerous films use windows with a view on the Eiffel Tower to indicate an affluent position in the city, from La RĂšgle du jeu/The Rules of the Game (Jean Renoir, 1939) to Le DĂźner de cons/The Dinner Game (Francis Veber, 1998). In La Haine/Hate (Mathieu Kassovitz, 1995), a characterâs failed attempt to âswitch offâ the lights of the monument poignantly shows his marginalisation in social space.8 In this role, the Parisian landmark actively exposes, and often problematises, the main binaries that produce urban space: centre/periphery, inclusion/exclusion, order/chaos and self/other. During its long career, the star landmark has therefore become a celluloid palimpsest where different social and cultural tensions are constantly reworked.
In more complex appearances, the Tower undermines the artificial divisions that filter the lived experience in urban space, thriving through the embodiment of perplexing contradictions. Three key performances of the Tower illustrate how its function as protagonist/camera and ambivalent body interact to disrupt conventional binaries, while establishing the main coordinates of its star appeal. In Paris qui dort, RenĂ© Clair links the Towerâs image to romantic love and deadly seduction, showing its tremendous visual power. In Le MystĂšre de la Tour Eiffel/The Mystery of the Eiffel Tower (Julien Duvivier, 1928), the landmark is screened as a site of playful adventures and uncanny danger, revealing a mysterious sonic space. Within the next decades, as film production moved into the studios, the Tower was mostly present on sets as a replica. Returning to location shooting, the French New Wave filmmakers established the icon as a coveted presence in art-house films and revitalised its image through roles displaying its timeless modernity, self-referential persona and everyday presence in the city. In particular, Zazie dans le mĂ©tro (Louis Malle, 1960) shows how a visit to the monument becomes an inner journey and how films mediate the experience of the landmark, contributing to its affective impact.
A Dark-Bright Star Is Born
RenĂ© Clair cast the Eiffel Tower in his first feature film, Paris qui dort, at a time, in 1923, when the Tower was a prominent subject in the Paris art world. Influenced by both avant-garde groups and the mainstream film industry in which he worked, the filmmaker, who saw cinemaâs main purpose as ârecording movementâ, directed a film with motion as a âvisual themeâ.9 In it, an old scientist paralyses the city with a crazy ray, a transparent reference to cinema itself.10 Only Albert (Henri Rollan), the watchman of the Eiffel Tower, and five persons travelling in an airplane remain out of the rayâs reach. All Paris belongs to them, but soon their absolute freedom becomes oppressive. When they receive a call for help from the scientistâs niece, they hurry to reset the world in motion.
The film opens with the Towerâs subjective viewpoint in an aerial vista screening the Seine, flickering in the sun, on which barges slowly advance underneath the arched bridges. An extreme-long shot of a majestic panorama follows, with a recognisable Arc de Triomphe in the frame. When the watchman wakes up the next day, he discovers a frozen city, shown through a dizzying tilt on the Champ de Mars. Disguised as Albertâs point of view, the shot unexpectedly uncovers him at the bottom of the frame. The playful shift in perspective certainly serves to undermine fixed points of observation, in a contemporary change that reflects the modernist era. It also reminds us that the Eiffel Tower is, at all times, both camera and protagonist.
When Albert leaves the edifice, the camera vertically tracks his circular descent of a spiral staircase, thus reinforcing the symmetrical geometry of the frame. His active movements are intercut with tilts of the Towerâs silhouette viewed from a distance. After several cuts, the camera forgets about the hero and begins to wander on the Towerâs iron curves, fetishising its tactile latticework. A shot lingers on a platform to absorb the massive iron beams radiating in all directions. When Albert steps into the mise-en-scĂšne, his presence comes as a surprise, since the Tower now occupies the spotlight. As the watchman gets off the west pillar, the spectator feels more connected to the bodily presence of the monument than to the protagonist.
In the second part of the film, the Tower becomes both a site of playful spatial practices and a fault line where the urban id erupts through aggressive and libidinal impulses. After using Paris as a playground, the six protagonists spend their days on the Tower. A fast tilt on a girder un...