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"Blu-ray Review: Breathless (À bout de souffle) (1960)"

4 Comments -

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Blogger Joel Bocko said...

Compelling write-up, though in some ways one could reverse the roles, with the larger-than-life movie-imitating Michel representative of the genre influences on Godard, and Seberg's ordinary Jo, selling newspapers on the Champs Elysees, as indicative of the anthropological/verite influences on the New Wave - or one Melies, one Lumiere I suppose. But then as you point out, she's American/he's French, she's a famous movie star/he at the time was not, so even within themselves they represent the contradictions inherent in Godard's outlook.

I love the way he once described the film: "I set out to make Scarface, but I ended up with Alice in Wonderland."

Or something to that effect.

I had no idea the Academy's giving him an honorary Oscar. His response is hilarious and entirely expected. Anyway, he SHOULD stiff them if they plan, like last year, to ignominiously hand them out months beforehand, separate from the broadcast, as if these legends aren't worthy enough to eat up airtime belonging to awkward presentations by the Twilight tots. Disgraceful.

September 17, 2010 at 9:29 PM

Blogger Shubhajit said...

Great post Tony. Breathless was one of the turning points in my years as a serious movie lover. On one hand, as you've noted, the movie has its share of mainstream inclinations, while on the other it also started Godard's rebellious journey as a filmmaker. It thus contains a fascinating balance of the status quo & iconoclasm.

I especially liked the analogies you've drawn out of the protagonists' characters. One often ends up enjoying a mainstream movie without really liking it, or for that matter appreciate an arthouse movie despite yawning one's way through it. Breathless was one of those rare works that managed to combine the best of both the worlds.

September 18, 2010 at 5:22 AM

Blogger Tony Dayoub said...

MovieMan, I'm not holding my breath concerning Godard's confusing answer to the Academy. They DO deserve to be stiffed, holding the Governor's Awards dinner in November rather than invite the honorees to the Oscar show.

Shubhajit, it is an exhilirating film isn't it? There's a dynamism to the tone, setting, performance styles, and more which is rare to find these days. In some ways BREATHLESS is dated, but in others it's still ahead of the times.

September 18, 2010 at 9:29 AM

Blogger Joel Bocko said...

A personal note on the movie - when I initially saw it (it was my first Godard) and was baffled at its reputation. It seemed so slight and underwhelming. I went on to see and prefer Masculin Feminin and Week End followed by many more Godards in the years to come. Eventually I came around on the film and now like it a good deal, but the turnaround came ironically when I dispensed with the legacy and just approached it as Godard's giddy and heady tribute to the American gangster films he loved (and to all the ideas kicking around in his head). Seeing it purely as a lark helped me enjoy it more and, paradoxically, to appreciate any weightier elements to it as well (first as Scarface, THEN as Alice). Although it's still not one of my favorite Godards, which says as much about how much I love his oeuvre as about the film itself.

September 18, 2010 at 11:04 PM

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