City of Sound is about cities, design, architecture, music, media, politics and more. Written by Dan Hill since 2001.

I've had a sporadic relationship with Douglas Gordon's work, yet it's had a profound effect on me when I've seen it, heard it. Maybe I've been lucky enough to have experienced  his greatest hits, the two works based around Alfred Hitchcock; '24 Hour Psycho', in which the film is slowed down to play over a duration of 24 hours, and 'Feature Film', in which a zoom onto a conductor's hands is foregrounded, guiding the performance of Bernard Herrmann's soundtrack, while the movie itself is footnoted, diminished.

Both are fascinating, effective studies of time, movement, image and sound. His other work has been described as less successful, yet there was no way I was going to miss his collaboration with French artist Philippe Parreno, 'Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait'.

Zidane5

This is an utterly overwhelming piece. The ultimate time and motion study, it's been described many times since its debut at Cannes last year, but for those unfamiliar with the idea, Gordon and Parreno set up 17 cameras to follow Real Madrid 'galactico' footballer Zinedine Zidane through the course of an average La Liga game. That's it. They follow Zidane the player, not the match. The idea, in Parreno's words,  was to "make a feature film which follows the main protagonist of a story, without telling the story."

It's certainly not a traditional documentary – there is no exposition of the enigmatic Zidane's life amidst the celebrity culture of Madrid, or of his French-Algerian heritage, growing up in the mean streets of Marseilles. There are merely a few superimposed fragments of text, apparently from Zidane, which add little in the way of context or explanation.

Without this, the film has only Zidane, and his movements, to portray. While the careful editing of image and sound is certainly an aesthetic intervention, it is otherwise the purest possible depiction of football.

Zidane3

Given Gordon's previous work are studies of "time, movement, image and sound", football is an alluring subject. (I've written previously about football, movement, etc.)

Footballmatch_ballmovement

But this is also about portraiture, very clearly, and perhaps narrative too.

So these 17 cameras – including the first commercial use of two Panavision HD cameras with specially modified zoom,  courtesy of the US Department of Defence – in the hands of the best camera operators in US and Europe – essentially Scorcese and Almodovar's crews – follow this player, for around 90 minutes, through a fairly average La Liga game against Villareal. And it's fascinating, both as a study of portraiture, movement, yes, but also as a study of football.

Zidane has the ball for about, oh, two to three minutes in total. It's fairly extraordinary how little he sees of the ball, and yet how creative he is within those constraints. Of Zidane the player, more later, but this paucity of ball possession also illustrates the overwhelming sensation derived from watching him.

The solitude. The sheer loneliness of the player, particularly in the number 10 position (yes, he wears '5' on his shirt, but Zidane is formally a classic number 10.) The pivot through which play is articulated, Zidane has the ball at his feet for a few minutes, yet spends every other microsecond focused on it. His eyes rarely leave it, or the space around it, or the potential space that could be extrapolated from the perceived trajectories of ball and players. His focus is extraordinary, the saturated light of the football stadium at night reducing his eye sockets to deep pools of blackness, his face wearing a mask of intense concentration. Where other players look at each other, the crowd, the referee, Zidane only has eyes for the ball.

Zidane9

The combination of zooms and pans swirl and dart around him, and only occasionally leave him to sweep out to reveal the immense scale of football, the fans eye view and the televisual view through which we usually see the game. Yet principally, the cameras are so tight that he's often alone in the frame, their gaze lingering over his hands, his feet, the famous bald profile dripping with sweat, the microphones picking up his pants, grunts, snorts, occasional cries.

Spanish football is perfect for this view. Close control, rapid interplay – all matador twirls and stilleto flicks. With the more expansive English game, you'd need a couple of cameras mounted in the roof. With the more studious Italian game, some kind of time-lapse, perhaps.

Zidane2

And Zidane himself, the centre around which everything revolves, is perfect as a subject. Paul Myerscough, in the LRB:

"Zidane. His cropped hair, his leanness, give an impression of asceticism. His features are still, his eyes shadowed under heavy brows. There are flickers of consternation, of irritation, of concern, impatience and contempt; he smiles only once, sharing a joke with Roberto Carlos. But for the most part he is impassive. Even after his finest moment, in the 70th minute of the game, when he glides through the Villarreal defence, spins on his right foot and loops a perfect cross with his left for Ronaldo to score at the far post, his expression barely changes. It has always been the convention in Hollywood cinematography that the close-up guarantees intimacy with its subject; in this, it shares with one important tradition of portraiture the notion that the image should express interiority. In Zidane, the relentless scrutiny of his face yields little in the way of an inner self, still less anything that would help us to account for his sublime skill. We feel for him, but do not identify with him; he is alone, lonely even, and distant, other."

As Parreno notes, Zidane's reclusive nature also reinforces this sense of distance, that as a person, compared to his then compatriots of Beckham, Figo, Ronaldo et al,  'he only exists after the first kick, and before the last kick – he is the Total Footballer, after Cruyff"

Zidane10

Gordon notes that the entire thing – Zidane, his performance, and the artwork – is really "an exercise in solitude." Fragility too. It seems odd to describe such a commanding physical presence as fragile, but that's what comes across. His dark concentration exists purely for the ball, the game, and given Zidane's utter mastery of his particular subject – the ball – what it reveals most of all is the humbling impotence of the sportsman within the wider game, how even this greatest of players is incapable of controlling the result, even though he apparently effortlessly controls every ball pinged towards him, no matter the pace or direction. Hence his frustration, perhaps, and his apparent fragility. Zidane himself notes, watching the film, that it shows the intensity and focus of concentration in a way you never see with TV coverage. It also shows that, although he wanted to "play the game of his life" given the presence of the cameras, you can't control that, no matter how intense the focus.

Zidane1

Gordon and Parreno didn't take football films as inspiration, thankfully, but rather Andy Warhol's 1964 "13 Most Beautiful Women". But more than this, they draw from the history of portraiture. Given that the production of the film was entirely unpredictable – no one knew what would happen in the match, whether Zidane would limp off after 5 minutes or play the game of his life – it was impossible to storyboard, or provide direction cues for the camera crew. So the 'Making Of' documentary reveals a live improvisation by Parreno, Gordon and the camera crew, directing on the fly. They have no control over the 'actors' in this particular drama. Intriguingly, in lieu of a storyboard, the only preparation the artists did with the crew was to take them to the Prado on the day of the game.

Having secured exclusive access to the gallery, Parreno and Gordon led the crew through a rapid yet extraordinary history of art, with particular emphasis on both the portraiture and reproductions of historical scenes in the art of Goya and Velázquez.

Velázquez, in particular, resonates. As the movie becomes near ambient in its impassive singular vision – almost like a visual version of an aural drone, or raga – Velázquez, as an artist who repeatedly endeavoured to capture the point between sleeping and waking, seems entirely apposite for this dreamlike, hypnotic trance.

Also, Goya's portraiture, most famously in the Maja pictures, clothed and naked, exploring different facets of portraiture of personality.

Maja_naked

Maja_clothed

(Additionally, the crew paused in front of Hieronymous Bosch's  'Garden of Earthly Delights', presumably to explore depiction of narrative of multiple parts, stretched over a physical space.)

Bosch

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Despite this art history lesson, the thing itself is pitched half way between film and art. In the accompanying documentary, a contributor notes that Zidane in close-up has a "darkness, density – reminiscent of Bresson" yet at other times, it's "epic, like a John Ford western." Gordon and Parreno clearly like the idea of this playing in both galleries and cinemas (although whether it would've achieved a cinema release without Zidane's extraordinary contributions to the last World Cup, both creative and destructive, is a moot point.) Gordon notes that it would "take people from the white cube into the black box, or the black box into the white cube".

Zidane6

The only point at which the film feels a little clumsy – although I appreciate the idea – is at half-time in the game, when the cameras and the narrative suddenly zoom out, Powers of Ten-like, to reveal other events going on that particular day. Suddenly, it cycles through a series of events, quotidian and unusual, with subtitles bluntly stating the subjects: from Sir John Mills dying to the performance of a Bob Marley puppet on an Ipanema beach; a 48-hour marathon reading of Don Quixote; the "online release of new videogames" and "hundreds of toads swell to 3 times their normal size and explode in a fresh water pond in Germany", an Asian-African summit closing in Jakarta, a car bomb in Najaf, Iraq killing nine, a collapsed mine in Turkey and so on. (At one point, the camera pauses on a still of the dreadful aftermath in Najaf, where a kid is spotted wearing a Zidane shirt.) Again, a little clumsy, although it presumably is further exploring these contrdictory overlaps between the actual insignificance of a game of football, and the almost overriding dramatic pull of such things.

Zidane_halftime

The use of sound, as you'd expect from Gordon, is particularly strong. Not so much the musical soundtrack, composed for the film by fellow Glaswegians, Mogwai, although their languorous drones and dramatic dynamics work very well over the long distance of a football match. But the sound of the football match, from the close zooms of Zidane Рhis occasional polyglot shouts, his deep breathing, the soft crunch of his studs on grass Рpanning up to the incredible noise of the Madril̩nos Рof their endless barrage of horns, a drone echoed in Mogwai's organs and guitars. The 'Making Of' documentary pauses on this process briefly. Unfortunately it fails to introduce the participants, but what I assume to be the principal sound engineer notes that they were so "dependent on sound Рwe're almost defining the images by using sound." This is spot on Рwith the absence of traditional dialogue of any kind, the narrative is only perceived through a variety of flashpoints Рgoals, near misses, a sending off Рleaving the rest of the match to be articulated in movement and sound. At one moment, the soundtrack appears to cut to another time and place altogether, layering the sound of kids playing football and dogs barking over that of the match. At other times, it cross-cuts rapidly from the compressed sound of TV coverage to the rich detail of the sound at the middle of the pitch. At other times, the soundtrack, and then silence.

Gordon again: "the silence of portraiture is very important."

It's a beautiful piece, to be absorbed carefully. It requires concentration from the viewer too, as the repeated image of Zidane searching for the ball, for space, and not finding it become almost entirely abstract interwoven patterns of white shirt, dark skin and green grass. Warhol's 'Empire',  or Brian Eno's 'Mistaken Memories of Medieval Manhattan' are precursors rather more than 'Escape to Victory'.

Warhol Empire

As a result, I can see why one user at IMDB posted the comment : "The film is excruciatingly boring; it is a pain to watch, and it is better to watch paint dry." I can only totally disagree, but those expecting something like a documentary or traditional coverage of a football match should indeed beware. This is a quite beautiful, challenging portrait, in sound and image.

And for the football fans amongst you, what of the player himself? Richard Williams, one of the foremost writers on the kind of player Zidane exemplifies, wrote:

"Virtually devoid of context, the economy of his movement and the sheer absence of fuss as he goes about his work are strikingly apparent, rendering the delicacy of his footwork even more moving."

It is entirely moving. That's exactly the right word. To a player, a player of almost any standard, watching Zidane is extraordinary. While all the above context indicates that even non-football fans will get something out of this, perhaps those who love and play the game will be even more fascinated in the detail.

In his book 'The Perfect 10', Richard Williams describes the appeal of watching Zidane, of how his transformation when in possession of the ball perhaps explains the passion of his endless pursuit of it:

"Zidane is a big man, 1.85 metres tall and weighing 78 kg. He has a slightly ponderous gait and shoulders that tend to stoop, giving the illusion of ungainliness. He does not have lightening-fast feet or much of a sprint. But when the ball comes to him he suddenly reveals the lightness of a ballet dancer and the footwork of a fencer. Gracefulness falls upon him. Then he can do anything he wants with the ball, from the impossible delicacy of a running spin through 360°, his famous roulette, to the shattering violence of a waist-high volley fired from a range of more than twenty yards with his notionally weaker left foot. And when he does something like that, no one in the stadium envisages any other outcome."

Even given that few minutes' possession of the ball, he so rarely gives the ball away. He's always progressive, always trying to create. It's one of the purest acts of complete creativity I've ever seen. Nothing is mundane, or regressive – every flick, every move, every dribble is trying to create, to lift the team, to shift the play upfield towards the opposition's goal, to keep the ball moving into interesting spaces.

Zidane4

His first touch isn't just immaculate, to use a well-worn football cliché; it's an immaculate conception, as it inherently contains the logic and purpose of the next few moves. He traps the ball, body forming a triangle as one should, no matter what angle and pace it arrives at, and in trapping it, he's also moving it forward, away from the defender, into space.

Zidane11

There are details you've never seen before. The cameras and edits pause several times on Zidane's habit of tapping his toes into the grass, scuffing and pawing the ground like a thoroughbred in the stalls, or as Williams has it "a reflexive gesture like a trumpeter emptying his spit-valve between phrases".

Zidane_toetap

Even given the tight angles of Spanish football, and 21 other men sharing the pitch, he appears alone, so often, throughout. This is exaggerated by his complete concentration. His face betrays little emotion; even when Madrid score twice, one goal his own making, there is no smile – his face remains the same granite-hewn angles. In fact, he smiles only once, when sharing a joke with fellow left-sided player, the Brazilian Roberto Carlos.

And then within minutes, right at the end of the game, he suddenly loses it, and is attacking one of the opposition in a melée which is frankly nothing to do with him. It's shocking, out of nothing, apparently. And yet had his frustration had been unconsciously and invisbibly growing throughout an hour of pushes, kicks, shoves by Villareal's markers; and of his teammates' inability; of his own inability to direct the game as he saw it in his mind's eye; perhaps even the lapse of concentration when he allowed himself to smile; maybe just the endless uncertainty of football itself? Or maybe none of those things.

It's a curious and dramatic reflection of how he ended his career at the World Cup in 2006, which everyone knows by now. There's little point attempting to connect these events into a coherent explanation – there is none. There is only the recording of the event itself.

Zidane8

Gordon "didn't want to make a heroic portrait, actually it's the portrait of an anti-hero." We expect too much of people we want to be heroes, and Zidane's career constantly reminded us of this, even as perhaps the greatest player ever. Just because someone plays like an angel, doesn't mean they are an angel cf. Miles Davis and a million other artists. It doesn't excuse it. It just is. Myerscough, in the LRB:

"Searching his face for 90 minutes brings us no closer to understanding his actions at the end of this game, just as no account of his interaction with Materazzi can account for his final self-immolation. If that’s what it was."

I adored this movie, or artwork, whatever it is. I pored over every aspect of the DVD extras. DVD is a satisfying way of experiencing it, given the intensity of focus it allows through proximity. Yet I suspect it will work very well installed in a dark gallery space, with a pin sharp projection from floor to ceiling and bathed in surround sound – as per a Christian Marclay piece.

I've grabbed a random section of the film, below – it seemed in keeping with the spirit of the piece to pick a section at random, rather than the 'highlights' the trailer might. Given YouTube's limits on duration and dimension, it is of course entirely the wrong medium to convey a piece of work which is about stretched time and space, but hey.

Last words to Zidane:

"Magic is sometimes very close to nothing at all."

Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait (DVD) [Amazon UK]
Official site

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20 responses to “‘Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait’, by Douglas Gordon and Philippe Parreno”

  1. John Harrington Avatar
    John Harrington

    Saw it at the cornerhouse with my flatmate who is an avid ‘les bleus’ fan – he was expecting some classic you tube style ‘megs’ footage etc. .. we had contrasting reviews to say the least.
    No mention of the excellent m/m titles?

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  2. Dan Hill Avatar

    Thanks John. There is a mention of “the excellent m/m titles” now 🙂

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  3. Marty Avatar

    Wow. Only March and already we have a strong contender for post of the year. You’ve put into words everything I felt about watching this film, and much more besides.
    I’ve not seen the DVD yet but the film itself on the big screen was mesmeric – as you say, one is no closer to ‘knowing’ Zidane at the end of the film, he remains as inscrutable as ever. I loved the way he quietly says to the referee “you should be ashamed of yourself” after awarding Villareal a penalty, if I remember correctly – one of the only moments (as well as the sending off incident) when he shows any engagement with the match as a whole, rather than the lonely, isolated figure he cuts through the rest of the film.
    One aspect of the film I found fascinating was the contrast between Zidane’s extreme economy of movement and mastery of space with David Beckham, who can often be seen in the background, bombing up and down, a high-energy performance based around fitness and industry, rather than pure skill and artistry. Beckham even runs fully across the pitch to embrace Zidane for setting up the goal – the only player to do so if I think. Zidane looks isolated even within his own team mates. To be shown so completely alone within a crowd of 50,000 people is an amazing piece of portraiture.
    One minor thing, I think you under-represent the majestic score by Mogwai – it’s a piece of soaring beauty. But it needs to be heard at an appropriate volume – I recommend seeing them live. But I love the way that in the film it is intertwined with the crowd noise, and the points of silence.
    An awesome post about a sublime film.
    Chapeau!

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  4. hongcgi Avatar

    I love Zidane.

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  5. run dogg Avatar

    Zidane Rules !!!

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  6. Matt Avatar

    Great post, thanks.

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  7. Dan Hill Avatar

    Many thanks Marty, much appreciated. And you’re right about Mogwai – I didn’t mean to under-represent them, and I like their work. Their score is used beautifully, but as you say, it’s the dynamics of playing their music against the sound of silence, the crowd, the match, and the stadium itself that is particularly majestic.
    While I’m on, here’s a (translated) review of the film from Cahiers du Cinema, no less.

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  8. Dan Slevin Avatar

    In all the discussion of this film I have yet to see anyone mention Fußball wie noch nie (Football As Never Before) from 1971 where another artist Hellmuth Costard did exactly the same thing with George Best in a game for Man Utd v Coventry. “Zidane” may well be the film of the year (I haven’t had the pleasure yet) but it is not original. In fact a lot of your comments about the film could equally apply to the earlier work, though obviously it was less technically accomplished (8 or 9 16mm cameras instead of all that HD).

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  9. Dan Hill Avatar

    Cheers Dan. The LRB article I linked to actually talks about that film – but makes clear the differences too I think.

    “This kind of thing has been attempted before. In 1970, Hellmuth Costard filmed George Best playing for Manchester United against Coventry City. Costard was forced to shoot Best with fewer cameras and from a greater distance, so that he most often appears full-length and as part of the game going on around him. The resulting film, Fussball wie noch nie (‘Football Like Never Before’), is very different from Zidane partly because of these aesthetic choices and technological constraints, but also because of the differences between the two subjects. Best was as exuberant on the pitch as he was off it; his gifts were extravagant, and he liked to show them off. His charismatic style, and his fallibility as a player were continuous with his media persona, so that we both recognise him and imagine we get to know him better by watching Costard’s film.”

    Interesting he makes the point that it’s different due to both the technical setup and the difference between Best and Zidane as subjects.

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  10. Ben Avatar

    Wow, that’s an amazing post.
    Thanks for that.

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  11. Sam Avatar
    Sam

    Thanks for the post. I think watching the DVD before and after reading this post cast the piece in a different light for me. Not to be mistaken, I was drawn into his lonely and isolated existence on the football pitch origninally, but i missed the contrast with Beckham (even more poignant due to Beckhams place as the face of football, while Zidane could be said to be the unseen heart beat) and I think that I too might have failed to credit the score completely, with its subtle undertones allowing the atmosphere of the crowd to come to life.
    Zizu is my modern day Shakespeare. It has been a privillege to watch him prowl the great pitchs around the world with his uncomprimising self belief in his own talents (completely justified). No doubt in the top three footballers to ever amaze us mere mortals. To be one of the best is unique, to be the greatest is lonely. Something I think this piece achieves with outstanding success.
    Thanks for the great read!

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  12. Sean Jacobs Avatar

    Damn good post! Captures the tone and intensity of the film. I just saw the DVD. Had to import it from the UK. I’ll reference you in my blog entry. Really good.

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  13. Steven Ho Avatar
    Steven Ho

    Its been a while this was originally posted, but I gotta say I love your writing – the style, the content, the pacing. Can you give me tips/advice/info on how to become a writer like you or how you can about to such a graceful style (fitting for a player like zidane).

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  14. Martijn Avatar
    Martijn

    Great, nice examination of this art piece. A gorgeous film indeed, I saw it in cinema. Luckily during the Rotterdam Film Festival, because this was one of the most popular films there, so it showed in the biggest room. Watching it with maybe 200-300 people feels like being a football audience. Great experience. Your analysis and references to art history are very thorough and interesting, thanks for those insights! Was thinking myself about the link with early conceptualism and performance (john cage, bruce naumann), in the sense that it examines the sounds, movements, dimensions of the game and the player.

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  15. Moussa cisse Avatar
    Moussa cisse

    hi my name is moussa cisse please remember this name one day iam goin to be THE NEXT ZIDANE

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  16. tenders Avatar

    Great post – i love this film but haven’t quite been able to express quite WHY! – you’ve cleared a few things up for me. The Zidane cross for the goal move is one of my top film moments of the decade – stunning.

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  17. tim Avatar
    tim

    wow what a film!!!! what do the words at the end mean?

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  18. Z33shy Avatar

    Simply amazing…

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  19. Bree Avatar
    Bree

    i live in los angeles & have been wanting to see this film for over 4 years now. you can imagine my delight when i found out that the local hammer museum in la was presenting a free screening. i couldn’t wait.
    words fail me as to how amazed and moved i was by this work of art. as an incredibly loyal zidane fan i was thrilled but got so much more out of this than i could have ever imagined. i feel there’s nothing i could add that this post hasn’t already stated. as an art history graduate & a football fan i watched this through two sets of eyes which came together as one. that it was screened at an art museum means someone out there gets it. i’m sure once i submit this i will think of many more things i could write but for now i will stop.
    while i have enjoyed every moment of the 2010 world cup zidane’s absence is very apparent to me. i watched this film the same day i watched the uruguay v netherlands semi-final. i, more than ever, felt how much i missed him.

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  20. Bree Avatar
    Bree

    of course i think of something else now…first i would love for the film to be released here in the us/region one dvd. PLEASE!!
    second, during the sound credits i noticed the name kevin shields…of my bloody valentine? if anyone would know about making beautiful noise it would be him. 🙂

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