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Posts Tagged ‘Godard New Yorker’

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It’s May 16th, I’m Gina Telaroli and this is TakePart.com’s look at the week in social action…

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Speaking of Godard and Richard Brody, Brody will be on hand tonight at New York City’s Film Forum to introduce a 730pm screening of Godard’s La Chinoise. With a hint of red in every frame, La Chinoise dissects idealism and youth with it’s story of a young group that forms a Maoist cell:

I watch that trailer and I think Mao Mao…

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With all the hubbub over it being the 40th anniversary of May 68, one can’t help but think about the French New Wave, and Jean-Luc Godard. And right on schedule New Yorker film critic Richard Brody has a new book out on Godard entitled Everything is Cinema, The Working Life of Jean-Luc Godard.

Godard always connected the personal to the public in his films, using cinema to express himself and work out issues while still paying tribute to the medium he loved. Brody’s book is about 700 pages long and is thus very detailed in accounts of Godard’s “working life” - I should probably admit now that I’m only on page 251, which gets to me to the time in life when he made Pierrot le fou.

The book works well as a primer for the political and philosophical evolution of both Godard and France and thus how philosophy and politics influenced the films he would make. Brody does a good job of weaving the politics through Godard’s life without losing focus of the fact that when it comes to Godard, “everything is cinema.”

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