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Page 1: New Wave Cinema

New Wave Cinema

Film Realism and Formalism

Page 2: New Wave Cinema

Table of Contents

1) Nouvelle vague2) Nouvelle vague’s contribution to film re

alism3) Realism or Formalism?

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Nouvelle vague

• ‘New Wave’ Cinema• Films in the late 1950s and 1960s which ar

e loosely linked by their self-conscious rejection of conventional filmmaking methods.

• Radical experiments in narrative construction, mise-en-scène, montage, and subjects and themes (political)

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Nouvelle vague

Jean-Luc Godard François Truffaut(1930- ) (1932-1984)

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Nouvelle vague

Eric Rohmer Claude Chabrol (1920- ) (1930 - )

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Nouvelle vague

Jacques Rivette André Bazin (1928 - ) (1918 - 1958)

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Nouvelle vague

Film journalists and critics for Cahiers du cinema

a) Attacked the films of many master filmmakers of the day

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Nouvelle vague

• Reappraisal of certain directors considered as outdated (Jean Renoir and Max Ophüls);

• eccentric (Jacques Tati and Robert Bresson);

• and unimportant and inartistic (Howard Hawks, Otto Preminger, Samuel Fuller, Nicholas Ray and Alfred Hitchcock).

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Nouvelle vague

1958• Claude Chabrol’s Le Beau Serge• François comes back to his home village after

a decade to find that his village hasn’t changed but his friend, Serge has.

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Nouvelle vague 1959• François Truffaut’s Q

uatre cent coups (Four Hundred Blows)

• Semi-autobiographical film about a boy who is neglected and misunderstood by his parents and teachers, skipping school, stealing a typewriter and being sent to institution

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Nouvelle vague1960• By this time, those y

oung filmmakers had become a force to reckon with.

• Jacques Rivette’s Paris, nous appartient (Paris Belongs to Us)

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Nouvelle vague

• Jean-Luc Godard’s A Bout de souffle (Breathless)

• A small-time thief, Michel Poiccart steals a car and murders a policeman. In the end, he is betrayed by his ambiguous girl Friend, Patricia.

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Nouvelle vague • Claude Chabrol’s Les Cousins

• Charles comes to Paris to share an apartment with his decadent cousin, Paul. He falls love with Paul’s friend, Florence. Paul does not care much about a serious relationship.

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Contribution to Film Realism

• CASUAL LOOK

- the lack of tight narrative structure - ignoring technical conventions - the heavy reliance on improvisation

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Contribution to Film Realism

• CASUALNESS → to give nouvelle vague films a great sense of presence = a significant instance of reality effects.

• Reality looks more casual than well-structured.

• The sense of presence similar to the one found in a TV film shot on live or a documentary film

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Contribution to Film Realism

• Hans Holbein Portrait of a Gentleman• Edouard Manet, The Balcony

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Contribution to Film Realism

• Auguste Renoir, Dance at the Moulin de la galette

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Contribution to Film Realism

• Camille Pissaro, Boulevard des Italiens

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Contibution to Film Realism

A) The lack of narrative structure: Truer to actual situations

Unclear narrative goal - e.g. the protagonists drift aimlessly, start actions on the spur of the moment (Chabrol's Les Cousins, Rivette’s Paris, nous appartient)

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Contribution to Film Realism

• Constant detours and digressions from the main gangster film narrative (Truffaut's Tirez sur le pianiste, Shoot the Piano Player, 1960)

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Contribution to Film Realism

b) Unconventional mise-en-scène

Location shooting and opposition to studio filmmaking: the influence of Neorealist filmmakers (Rivette's Paris Belongs to Us and almost all other Nouvelle vague films)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=trxPuwQYRAk

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Contribution to Film Realism

• Studio lighting was replaced by available light and some auxiliary sources. Filming without artificial lighting was made possible by the availability of fast film stock.

• e.g. Quatre cents coups

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Contribution to Film Realism

• Frequent and agile camera movements - panning and tracking by a hand-held camera or a light camera.

• Eclaire camera (mainly used in documentary film - direct cinema)

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Contribution to Film Realism

• The long tracking shot with a hand-held camera of Antoin Doinel in Quatre Cents Coups

• Impressive stop-motion (formalis ending)

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Contribution to Film Realism

• Hand-held elcaire camera captures Patricia and Michel walking along Champs Elysée

• Passer-bys gaze at them and walk in front of the camera.

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Contribution to Film Realism

• Claude Lelouche’s Un Homme et une femme (1966)

• Images go occasionally out of focus or shot against light or the sun

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Contribution to Film Realism• François Truffaut’s Jule

s et Jim (1960) - encyclopedia of film techniques (freeze frame, wipe, masking, swish pan, the insertion of newsreel footage and still photos, etc.)

• Casual composition and out of focus photography shot by zoom lens.

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Contribution to Film Realism

• Significant influence on new American films in the 1960 and 70s

• George Roy Hill’s Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid

• Casual filmmaking - images go out of focus

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Contribution to Film Realism

• Direct sound recording with noises not being erased

• Eric Rohmer’s films

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Realism or Formalism?

• Nouvelle vague filmmakers - self-conscious filmmakers

• No pretension that their films are disguised reality

• They rather manifest that their films are ‘films’ - something artificially created and invented

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Realism or Formalism?

• Films are created not only from imitating reality but also from referring to other films - a form of artifice

• Films are not representations of reality but commentaries on the film and the process of filmmaking

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Realism or Formalism?

• Jean-Luc Godard’s Pierrot le feu • Samuel Fuller’s cameo appearance comme

nting on filmmaking.• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZPXV_T

m6iIw

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Realism or Formalism?

• A film is made of quotations from other films.

• A bout de souffle and Humphrey Bogart


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