This is a weird, surrealist music video if there was ever one. The song, written by Serge Gainsbourg, came out in 1983, the same year as L’été meurtrier (One Deadly Summer), a defining film in Isabelle Adjani’s career. Five years before his underwater symphony Le grand bleu, Luc Besson directed the music video, turning it into an ode to everything maritime and aquatic. Everything about this short film, including Adjani’s apparent state of mind, is blue. With the exception of the title navy jumper, Adjani wears mermaid-like, tight-fitting outfit throughout the video, which earned Besson a Victoire de la Musique du Meilleur Video Clip, the highest pop-music award in France. Throughout the song, Adjani explains that she “went to the bottom of the swimming-pool”, and whenever there is a pool in French movie, weirdness is just around the corner. Just ask François Ozon. –http://fashionabecedaire.tumblr.com/
Luc Besson was born in Paris on March 18, 1959, and spent most of his childhood living in the idyllic settings of various Mediterranean hideaways where his parents worked as diving instructors.With Besson’s surroundings and family influences, it seemed assured that he would embark on a similar maritime career. From the age of 10, after an encounter with a friendly dolphin, Besson was determined to become a marine biologist, specializing in the study of the species.
Besson studied for this life plan throughout his teens until, at 17, a diving accident prevented him from ever diving again. His long-held dream cut short, Besson redirected his sights, deciding that he would become a filmmaker. Besson dropped out of school to seek work in the French film industry, and started making his own experimental films in super-8. At the age of 19, he moved to Los Angeles.
In 1983, after three years of experience as an Assistant Director, Besson made his first feature, Le Dernier Combat… read more