Godard with Belmondo and Seberg filming "Breathless".
By Joe Elliott
French director Jean-Luc Godard, who was a significant part of
the 1960s French New Wave movement, died on Tuesday at age 91. Godard was among
a handful of brilliant and innovative French filmmakers of the period that
included Louis Malle, Claude Chabrol, Eric Rohmer and Francois Truffaut. While
these young turks of the cinema viewed their work as intellectually
serious statements of their times, they did so with an air of stylish
nonchalance, off-handed humor and striking visual flair. Heavily influenced by
American movies, especially film noir of the 1940s, they, in turn, influenced
the next generation of American movie makers, among them Arthur Penn, Woody
Allen, Martin Scorsese and Quentin Tarantino.
Godard’s
“Breathless” ("À Bout de Souffle") is
probably the film for which most of us remember him best. His first feature,
it’s a witty, romantic cops and robbers picture starring Jean-Paul Belmondo and
American-born Jean Seberg as his girlfriend. “Breathless” is filled with
many memorable grace notes and startling visual signifiers, not the least of
which is the radiant young presence of Seberg herself. (Who can ever
forget the "New York Herald Tribune" sweater she wore?) According
to film critic Pauline Kael, whose early support of Godard helped create a
market for his pictures in the States, the director “saw something in the cheap
American gangster movies of his youth what French movies lacked; he poeticized
it and made it so modern (via jump cutting) that he, in turn, became the key
influence of American movies in the 60s.” In his later years, Goddard grew
more embittered and combative in his attitude and
was frequently critical of younger filmmakers. However, he never lost
his childhood love of the cinema. In a 1989 “New York Times” interview he is
quoted as saying, “I never thought I would do better
than John Ford or Orson Welles, but I thought I could perhaps do what Godard
was meant to do.”