Sonntag, 18. September 2022

Watch it for free on our CINEGEEK.DE Jean-Luc Godard - Masculin Feminin 



"We are the children of Marx and Coca-Cola"; from this famous line comes the German rental title. In Godard's film all characters are fascinated by America. They are young French people who are so fascinated by America. And in return, the young American audience was fascinated by Godard. But what exactly did they like about Godard? The world of chic cafes? Paul from Masculin Feminin (of course Jean-Pierre Leaud) moves casually in it. Or the bedrooms of young beautiful girls? Probably 70% of all young people in 1966 wanted to be Jean-Pierre Leauds Paul. Or at least Jean-Pierre Leaud. Or at least live in Paris. All the rest, demos, radical political ideas, endless conversations about sex, etc., can be considered accessories. Performance Art. By participating in all these activities, Paul meets the sexy singer Madeleine (Chantal Goya) and her equally sexy roommate. Of course we are aware that these are all girls and boys, like the Fridays For Future movement today. By the way, Godard played long before later movements with natural light, real time and original locations. The plot behind it is this: Paul is all about getting into bed with beautiful girls. He claims to be a communist and "worker", paints slogans on the walls and supports the student streets barricades. Above all, he tries to smoke like Jean-Paul-Belmondo. And he never succeeds. Paul is just one of the guys who go to the cinema and try to copy their role models. That's exactly how Masculin Feminin works.

Freitag, 16. September 2022

FREE ON CINEGEEK.DE Jean Luc Godard - Le Mepris 



Le Mepris is in a way an experiment: Jean-Luc Godard's first Big Budget production with a big star: Brigitte Bardot. It was a unique, more or less satisfying trip. After all, all of Godard's subsequent films can also be seen as a reaction to Le Mepris. Not that the film is without tension. It is not only between the dialogue lines that we feel the author's struggle against his producers. A failed dramaturge (Michel Piccoli) works for a corrupt American producer (Jack Palance) to write the script for a project to be directed by a veteran director (Fritz Lang). The dramaturgy has a beautiful wife (Brigitte Bardot) and both love each other deeply. However, the producer also has an eye on her. The film is supposed to bring the odyssey back to the screen. Palance has an infusion of the Hercules sandal films in his head, Fritz Lang an auteur film. Again and again they have tried to find the story of the Odyssey in Le Mepris: Piccoli as Odysseus, Bardot as Penelope and Palance as Poseidon. The dramaturg could just as well be an embodiment of Godard himself and Bardot his then wife Anna Karina. Ironically, the producers Joseph E. Levine and Carlo Ponti were similar to his hero in their approach to Godard and even had Bardot naked. Once Palance Lang yells at him while he sees a shot of the Odyssey (which looks like a postcard view of Greece): "Betrayal! In the opening scene, Bardot lies naked in bed. Her body, every single part of her body, is praised by Piccoli. She asks him how he likes her knees, her breasts, her arms. Everything is perfect! It should remain the only love scene in Le Mepris. We can imagine the producer shouting at Godard: "Deception"! Then the nude scene was born. Strange the fact that we see naked skin, but it's quite unerotic. After the disastrous first performance Palance storms out of the room, invites the participants into his villa. Especially Bardot, who reacts disturbed after Piccoli makes no effort to protect her from the producer. Palance and Bardot roar away in the convertible, Piccoli pants afterwards. Does he hand over his wife to the producer? We are in the transition to the second act. Bardot and Piccoli argue. The scene: The unfinished new apartment that Piccoli deserves with his screenplay. The couple's conversations, they are held in the tone of real life. Bardot compares her husband to the donkey Martin. The conversation is rather illogical, because basically both sides demand completely uncritical acceptance and forgiveness. The third act takes place in the breathtaking Mediterranean villa of Palance - based on a Greek temple. Many moments are based on the battles Godard fought with the establishment of the film industry. For the character Fritz Lang, some points from Fritz Lang's biography served as inspiration. When Lang notices that Cinemascope (the format in which Godard shot Le Mepris) is only for snakes, we think we hear Godard. Is that still the raw power of the Nouvelle Vague? Or even "quality cinema"? Palance seems somewhat out of place as a cliché of the American "Money Man". Bardot, on the other hand, is quite natural. The true Eva! Piccoli (in his first role!) embodies a man of little talent and greatest uncertainty. Almost the opposite of the roles Piccoli would play later! As always, Godard remains quite distant. Like almost all of his works Le Mepris is about filmmaking itself and he tells us about it - breaking through the "fourth wall". Le Mepris almost seems like a satire about communication itself! Obviously Godard (despite his side blows) is also fascinated by Cinemascope and the beauty of his own shots. Sure: Le Mepris, with the wonderful music of Georges Delerue is a feast for the eyes! Like his movie-in-film, Godard struggles to exaggerate and vulgarize his characters. After Le Mepris he decided that such films were not for him and simply takes himself out - from his own film.

FREE ON OUR CINEGEEK.DE Jean Luc Godard - Ten Minutes Older 



Godard himself has always catalogued everything cinematically and therefore his own career can also be catalogued excellently. He was 30 years old when he launched his career in 1960 with 15 films that broke the rules (+ six short films). This began with Breathless and ended with the hellish Weekend. During the 70s, political collective films followed. In the 80s he made his comeback in the cinema. First Name: Carmen was the most successful in Berlin. Godard's greatest work is probably the series Histoire(s) Du Cinema (1989-1999). Godard, the philosopher of cinema! He always worked fast. And always somewhere between deadly serious and funny. Above all, his films of the Nouvelle Vague still radiate the greatest seductive power and that very specific glamour that makes Godard the most popular director in our video library. In other words, there's no one else you'll rent more often! But you leave his later works alone. They lack the visual pop of the 60s. You can imagine Godard as a prisoner. Trapped in a sea of references and quotations. He loved to quote from films! Later he tried his hand at being a politician of cinema, but it failed. Maybe his head was too stuffed with intellectual bells and whistles. Vivre Sa Vie is about a woman who would like to be in Dreyer's Joan of Arc but cannot. Irony of fate, because Godard's actress Anna Karina is in a film herself! And in a top-class Godard film at that - but she doesn't seem to realise that. But Godard knows. Godard and Karina were colleagues in the 60s and also lovers. Their films together are always about loving her (and how it fails). Perhaps this is due to a lack of feeling that also characterises both films? There may be a romantic in Godard, but this romanticism seems to be foreign to him even in his old age. His films are always about films. Many of them are carried by lush music - but isn't that merely an artistic element of the film? As he says, it was above all a matter of classifying and ordering. He calls Made In USA a Disney film with a Bogart. Excuse me? That's why it's also a political film, according to Godard. I would sum it up like this: Godard's Nouvelle Vague films live above all from their images and their music. And some of our customers think that all Nouvelle Vague films are always about love. Then, during his political period, Godard turned away from man. Instead, he tried to stand up for humanity. His following films of the 80s seem distant (and visually beautiful). But the biggest question during this period is: how did he manage to get money for such eccentric works? And at this point he still had decades of creative work ahead of him! His late films are ugly and unhappy. They make hair-raising political claims; the beauty of the images of his depressive 80s films has disappeared. At some point he had outlived all his colleagues of the Nouvelle Vague and stood all alone. As always, one might add. He remained a lifelong provocateur and always obnoxious. His films from the 60s seem forever youthful and will be borrowed from you forever. And there's plenty of time for the rest. We have time. And we offer all Godard films in our video library, even the strangest ones.