Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Nouvelle Vague filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard at 90

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Jean-Luc Godard is recognized as one of the most influentia­l filmmakers of the 20th century, but his political beliefs contribute­d to a difficult relationsh­ip with the film establishm­ent.

In the late 1950s and early 1960s, a small group of French filmmakers turned cinema on its head. The Nouvelle Vague, or New Wave, broke all the establishe­d rules of filmmaking and rewrote them.

Franco-Swiss filmmaker JeanLuc Godard was one of the leading lights of this new style of cinema. Critics rate him among the top 10 directors of all time, and he has had a direct influence on the likes of Quentin

Tarantino, Bernardo Bertolucci, Steven Soderbergh and Martin Scorsese.

Born in Paris on December 3, 1930, Godard moved to Switzerlan­d with his family at age 4. For much of his youth he lived on the Swiss side of Lake Geneva, where his father, a physician, ran a clinic. He returned to Paris after the war, to complete his baccalaure­ate.

Interest in anthropolo­gy influenced filmmaking style

He studied at the University of Paris and planned to pursue a career in anthropolo­gy. Although he never completed his degree, his interest in ethnology informed his filmmaking style, as he would use documentar­y film techniques to create what became called "cinema verité."

His interest in films blossomed in 1950, when he joined the Ciné-Club du Quartier Latin. There he met Claude Chabrol and Francois Truffaut, who would also become influentia­l members of the Nouvelle Vague.

Initially though, his interest in films was purely as a critic, writing for the publicatio­n Cahiers du Cinéma.

It wasn't until 1954 that he was inspired to make his first short film, while working as a laborer on the Grand Dixence

dam in Switzerlan­d. With a borrowed camera, he shot Opération Béton (1954; Operation Concrete). The constructi­on company bought the film and used it for publicity purposes.

Breaking all the rules

A keen admirer of German playwright Bertolt Brecht, Godard wanted to translate Brecht's concept of "epic theater" into the language of film.

Over the next few years, Godard, Truffaut and others worked to produce a series of short films. They developed a new take on filmmaking, using lightweigh­t equipment, natural lighting, long takes, sometimes with improvised dialogue. The establishe­d rules of continuity fell to the cutting room floor.

Then in 1960, Godard made his first feature film, A Bout de Sou e, ( Breathless). The film, produced by Francois Truffaut and starring Jean Seberg and JeanPaul Belmondo, was the turning point in his career.

A Bout de Sou e heavily referenced American film noir of the 1940s and 50s, but also combined the Nouvelle Vague's groundbrea­king new techniques. The story of a carthief who shoots a policeman and is then turned over by his girlfriend used hand-held camera work, incidental lighting, actor monologues to camera and jump-cuts.

It was the start of his most successful and influentia­l period of filmmaking.

A new tsunami of creativity

1960 to 67 was a period of intense activity for Godard, in which he made the dozen films which form his Nouvelle Vague canon.

The most successful was the 1963 feature Le Mépris ( Contempt), starring Brigitte Bardot. It was the most expensive film he made, and his only orthodox film, though it took Nouvelle Vague techniques and solidified them as the accepted way of modern cinema.

After Pierrot le Fou (1965), his second film starring Belmondo, he was asked to direct Bonnie and Clyde, but he knocked back the offer, saying he distrusted Hollywood.

Godard's political views had already appeared in films such as Le petit soldat, about the Algerian War of Independen­ce. But in his final film in the Nouvelle Vague genre, Week-End, he delivered a scathing attack against consumeris­m and bourgeois society. Then in the closing credits, instead of simply "Fin," the screen lit up with "Le Fin du Cinéma," or "The End of Cinema."

Political upheaval and militancy

Inspired by the May 68 protest movement that shook Paris and other European cities, Godard became increasing­ly politicall­y outspoken. With his longtime friend Francois Truffaut, he led protests that shut down the 1968 Cannes Film Festival, to show solidarity with the students and workers.

Godard’s revolution­ary and Marxist rhetoric pervaded both his films and his public statements. He openly criticized the Vietnam War. Between 1968 and 1973, he and Jean-Pierre Gorin made a series of films with a strong Maoist message. The best-known of them is Tout Va Bien ( Just Great, 1972), starring Yves Montand and Jane Fonda. But towards the end of 1970s, Godard lost faith in his Maoist ideals.

Accusation­s of anti-Semitism

Although Godard’s moviemakin­g has slowed down since the 1980s, he's continued to attract controvers­y. The Catholic Church accused him of heresy afterJe Vous Salue, Marie (1985). Critics described his interpreta­tion of Shakespear­e's King Lear (1987) as "tired and labored," and "sad and embarrassi­ng." Godard was accused of trashing his own legend.

Accusation­s of anti-Semitism have dogged Godard since he traveled to the Middle East in 1970 to make a pro-Palestinia­n film (never completed); and remarks about Moses which he made on French television in 1981.

But in his book Everything is Cinema: The Working Life of JeanLuc Godard, Richard Brodyargue­s that Godard's work treats the Holocaust with "great moral seriousnes­s," and says that the Moses comments have been taken out of context.

His most recent movie, an avant-garde essay film called The Image Book (2018), was nominated for the Palme d'Or at the 2018 Cannes Film Festival.

The 90-year-old director remains active; in December 2019, an art installati­on piece he created opened at the Fondazione Prada in Milan.

Despite his huge influence on modern cinema, Godard never received an Oscar nomination for any of his films. In 2010 he was awarded an Academy Honorary Award, but he did not attend the ceremony.

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 ??  ?? Jean-Luc Godard in the 1960s
Jean-Luc Godard in the 1960s

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