Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Nouvelle Vague

Yesterday I spent most of the afternoon at the Broadway watching two movies with subtitles and it was definitely a great way to spend the day!  I started with Nouvelle Vague which is an amusing look at the making of Breathless, one of the most influential examples of the French New Wave movement in cinema, and I really enjoyed it. It is 1959 and Jean-Luc Godard (Guillaume Marbeck) is the only film critic at the Cahiers du cinema magazine who hasn't made his own film.  He convinces a reluctant Georges de Beauregard (Bruno Dreyfurst) to produce his debut based on a treatment written by Francois Truffaut (Adrien Rouyard) after the latter's success with The 400 Blows at Cannes, coerces his friend Jean-Paul Belmondo (Aubry Dullin) to star as the gangster, enlists Francois Moreuil (Paolo Luka Noe) to help him get his wife, Hollywood actress Jean Seberg (Zoey Deutch), to star as the American student, and hires war photographer Raoul Coutard (Matthieu Penchinat) to shoot it.  Godard wants the film to be as spontaneous and naturalistic as he can make it so he is rarely prepared with a completed script and only shoots when he is feeling inspired.  He insists on hand-held camera work and finds unusual ways to film scenes from different perspectives (this includes putting Coutard inside a mail cart).  He also forms an adversarial relationship with his actors to get the performances he wants.  As a result, the shoot is fraught with tension.  Beauregard is exasperated with all of the delays, Belmondo is worried that he will never work again, and Seberg is furious with her husband for convincing her to take the role and threatens to quit every day.  Everyone involved is certain that it will be the worst film of the year after a private screening but an epilogue describes its lasting impact on the French New Wave and subsequent cinematic movements.  What I enjoyed most is how Richard Linklater replicates Godard's style with grainy black and white film, a 4:3 aspect ratio, hand-held camera work, and multiple jump cuts.  I also loved the use of static shots with names listed below to introduce all of the notable players in the French New Wave (some of whom only appear for a few minutes) because it is almost as if Linklater is giving the audience a primer in film history.  All of the actors have an eerie resemblance to the real-life characters they play and I was especially impressed with the performances from Deutch (I loved her pixie cut) and Marbeck (he looks so cool in Godard's signature sunglasses).  There are lots of fun film references (at one point I was giggling out loud) and I highly recommend this to cinephiles.

Note:  Strangely enough, I became a fan of the French New Wave after seeing Close Encounters of the Third Kind.  I was fascinated by the character Claude Lacombe (I don't know why) and, when my dad told me that he was played by the famous director Francois Truffault, I immediately conspired to see The 400 Blows.

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