Remember PADS? This was the ‘post-Avatar depression syndrome’ widely reported in 2010, where distressed filmgoers claimed that they were feeling blue because the planet of Pandora from 2009’s Avatar was not real. James Cameron’s CGI-assisted vision of an alien rainforest throbbing with bioluminescence was so compelling they wanted to literally go there (and be immediately ripped apart by a hungry viperwolf or whatever).
Now Before Sunrise and Boyhood filmmaker Richard Linklater has given us a glimpse of his own personal Pandora, the movie he clearly dreams of living inside. In Nouvelle Vague, the Texas-born director has painstakingly but also somehow nonchalantly recreated the seductive, second-hand smoke-filled Paris of Jean-Luc Godard’s À Bout de Souffle – aka Breathless, the formally daring, existential crime film that strapped a rocket to the nascent New Wave cinematic movement in 1960.
The homage extends to shooting Nouvelle Vague in scratchy black-and-white with French dialogue and the same boxy aspect ratio as the original.
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The 29-year-old Godard is played by Guillaume Marbeck, radiating brattiness and loftiness from behind his permanent shades. He is a tetchy film critic whose journalistic peers like François Truffaut (Adrien Rouyard) and Claude Chabrol (Antoine Besson) are already making inroads into the actual film business. Godard’s reviews call for more spontaneity and emotional realism in cinema.
So what will happen when this wannabe director finally wrangles a budget out of bearish producer Georges de Beauregard (Bruno Dreyfürst)?