"Nouvelle Vague" is about the making of Jean-Luc Godard's "Breathless," really a love letter to the whole French New Wave and its participants. Director Richard Linklater has taken great pains to capture the look of Paris as it existed in the early films of Jean-Luc Godard, and the whole Cahiers du Cinema cohort. The film is shot in black and white, in the 4:3 aspect ratio, and in French language of course, reportedly with vintage lenses and film stock. In the early scenes, Linklater introduces every notable figure who appears with a snapshot close-up and caption so that we can quickly identify Suzanne Schiffman or Raymond Cauchetier before the action starts. It would be impossible to keep up with all the cameos and references otherwise.
It's the summer of 1959, and Paris is abuzz with filmmaking activity. Jean-Luc Godard (Guillaume Marbeck) is keen to get his first film made, after the successes of his friends like Francois Truffaut (Adrien Rouyard) and Claude Chabrol (Antoine Besson). With a script by Truffaut, Godard secures funds from a producer friend, Georges de Beauregard (Bruno Dreyfürst), a cinematographer Raoul Coutard (Matthieu Penchinat), a leading man, Jean-Paul Belmondo (Aubry Dullin), and even a Hollywood leading lady, Jean Seberg (Zoey Deutch), fresh off of the success of "Bonjour Tristesse." However, Godard's approach to filmmaking is unusual to say the least, which alarms and frustrates his collaborators. Seberg in particular is worried that she's made a mistake signing on to star in "Breathless."
I've never liked the films of Jean-Luc Godard very much, but "Nouvelle Vague" gives me a better insight on why he's considered one of the greats, and why he's so beloved by certain filmmakers. Linklater makes a smart choice positioning Jean Seberg as a major POV character, who doesn't understand why there's no script, why Godard only shoots for a few hours a day before sending everyone home, and why he's fine with using equipment so suboptimal they don't even have synchronous sound. Godard may be a genius, who pioneers improvisational filmmaking and goes on to invent the jump cut, but to Seberg he's also an annoying, pretentious film nerd who never seems to stop talking and is bad at communicating that he knows what he's doing. As the twenty day film shoot for "Breathless" goes on, innovations are made, tempers are lost, and cinematic history is achieved.
"Nouvelle Vague" will be best enjoyed by other film nerds, of course, who will appreciate the detailed recreations of "Breathless" shooting locations, and recognize the other directors who keep popping up in the story - Cocteau, Melville, Rossellini, and Bresson most prominently. However, I was impressed by how watchable the film was just as a comedy about a chaotic film shoot. Like the film that the characters are making, "Nouvelle Vague" is light and breezy, doing a good job of evoking the creative spontaneity that Godard was known for. I like that Godard and Seberg are pretty well matched - neither totally in the wrong nor blameless for the poor working relationship, but just operating on totally different wavelengths. Zoey Deutch is especially enjoyable when Seberg reaches the end of her patience.
I still don't like "Breathless" as a film. I understand and acknowledge its importance, but for all of Jean-Luc Godard's revolutionary verve, his instincts and his sensibilities don't appeal to me at all. Maybe it's culture clash and maybe it's his notoriously difficult personality coming across onscreen. Fortunately, Richard Linklaters' filmmaking is more to my tastes, and Linklater's appreciation for Godard is a good bridge to help me appreciate him a little more as well.
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