The Rebirth of Modern Film. The French New Wave (“Le Nouvelle Vague”) movement is primarily placed in the era from 1958-1964, but its influences span.

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Presentation transcript:

The Rebirth of Modern Film

The French New Wave (“Le Nouvelle Vague”) movement is primarily placed in the era from , but its influences span well beyond that time period.

As with Italian Neo-realism, French New Wave was in part a by-product of the post WWII era (along with Film Noir).

As a result of the German occupation of France during the war, many filmmakers (René Clair, Jean Renoir, Jacques Feyder) had to go into exile.

New filmmakers emerged following the war. These included Rene Clement who, with playwright, Jean Cocteau, produced the film; Beauty and the Beast (La Belle et la Bête).

Formed the groundbreaking journal of film criticism; Cahiers du Cinema Influenced by the writings of French film critic Alexandre Astruc, who had argued for breaking away from the "tyranny of narrative" in favor of a new form of film (and sound) language. Believed that, at its heart, it is the responsibility of cinema to represent reality as closely as possible (as evidenced, for example, by technology that tried to make film more realistic). At its best, French New Wave film should be as true as possible to reality first and artistic / narrative last (Think the Lumiere Brothers versus Georges Melies debate – Is film meant to be realistic or imaginary in nature?)

Cahiers had two guiding principles: 1) A rejection of classical montage-style filmmaking (favored by studios up to that time) in favor of: mise-en-scene, or, literally, "placing in the scene" (favoring the reality of what is filmed over manipulation via editing), the long take, and deep composition 2) A conviction that the best films are a personal artistic expression and should bear a stamp of personal authorship, much as great works of literature bear the stamp of the writer. This latter tenet would be dubbed by American film critic Andrew Sarris the "auteur (author) theory."

“This philosophy, not surprisingly, led to the rejection of more traditional French commercial cinema (Clair, Clement, Henri- Georges Clouzout, Marc Allegret, among others), and instead embraced directors - both French and American - whose personal signature could be read in their films. The French directors the Cahiers critics endorsed included Jean Vigo, Renoir, Robert Bresson and Marcel Ophüls; while the Americans on their list of favorites included John Ford, Howard Hawks, Alfred Hitchcock, Fritz Lang, Nicholas Ray and Orson Welles, indisputed masters, all. There were also a few surprising, even head-scratching favorites, including Jerry Lewis (thus beginning the stereotype about France's Lewis obsession) and Roger Corman.” (Green Cine)Henri- Georges ClouzoutMarc AllegretJean Vigo Robert BressonMarcel OphülsJohn FordHoward HawksAlfred HitchcockFritz LangNicholas RayOrson WellesJerry LewisRoger Corman

“While the Nouvelle Vague may never have been a formally organized movement, its filmmakers were linked by their self- conscious rejection of the ‘cinéma de qualité’ (‘cinema of quality’), the pompous and expensive costume pictures that dominated the French filmscape at the time. Besides being made to impress rather than express, these films generally afforded their directors very little freedom or creative control, instead catering to the commercial whims of producers and screenwriters. “ (New Wave Film)

New Wave film was intended to reject the formulaic, big budget films of Hollywood and the rest of the studio-driven, economically-motivated cinematic world at the time. French New Wave and similar movements (such as the British “Free Cinema”), in part, took creative control of film away big studios, writers and financial heads and put it in the hands of filmmakers. Arguably this was a major contributor to the “art house” film movement (not a formal movement per se), that was willing to make films that were artistically and culturally relevant without concern for overwhelming commercial success or flawless filmmaking.

Since many of the New Wave directors were on limited budgets and has only a minimal understanding of film production, their films adhered to some basic conventions that were as much practical as artistic: Jump cuts: a non-naturalistic edit, usually a section of a continuous shot that is removed unexpectedly, illogically Shooting on location Natural lighting Improvised dialogue and plotting Direct sound recording Long takes

French New Wave Classics: The 400 Blows launched both the filmmaking career of FrançoisTruffaut and the Antoine Doinel series. The 400 BlowsFrançoisTruffaut Alphaville (Criterion Edition): Eddie Constantine talks to an electric fan in this sci-fi gangster noir. It works. AlphavilleEddie Constantine Band of Outsiders (Bande à part) is one of Jean-Luc Godard's most poetic and accessible films. Band of OutsidersJean-Luc Godard Breathless (A bout de soufflé): Imitating Bogart's cool, Belmondo created one all his own. BreathlessBogartBelmondo The Bride Wore Black (1967): Truffaut's most overt homage to Hitchcock is quite an entertaining diversion. The Bride Wore Black Contempt features a fascinating, self-reflective performance from Fritz Lang. ContemptFritz Lang Hiroshima, Mon Amour, a haunting collaboration between Marquerite Duras and Alain Resnais. Hiroshima, Mon AmourAlain Resnais Jules and Jim, Truffaut's fast-paced yet touching, often-imitated story of the cinema's most famous ménage à trois. Jules and Jim Last Year at Marienbad, Resnais's visually thrilling, narratively challenging meditation on, among other things, cinema itself. Last Year at Marienbad

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