French new wave Eda Aganoglu.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
greatest-actors-turned-directors.
Advertisements

Auteur theory.
La Nouvelle Vague (The French New Wave) By Kevin Krasko.
Vertigo How many different ways can we look at Hitchcock?
New Wave Cinema Film Realism and Formalism. Table of Contents 1) Nouvelle vague 2) Nouvelle vague’s contribution to film realism 3) Realism or Formalism?
Introduction to French New Wave Cinema
Realism or Formalism? Overall documentary feel of nouvelle vague films Location shooting, natural light, direct sound recording, grainy photography, casual.
French Cinema & Entertainment By Alexandrie & Belle.
Week 6 February 15 th Film Genres and Auteurs The French nouvelle vague, counter culture...Debord, Godard, et al. Truffaut, Chabrol, Tati, and the International.
Defining and controlling the space of the frame Aspect ratio Masking Camera placement Focus Perspective Mobile framing.
Auteur Theory Daniel Taylor.
Denys Arcand Quebec Auteur. Quebec Cinema: New interventionist Liberal government of Quebec ended drought in feature film production Pierre.
The Auteur Theory. Film Director Pedro Amodovar.
New Wave Cinema Film Realism and Formalism. Table of Contents 1) Nouvelle vague 2) Nouvelle vague’s contribution to film realism 3) Realism or Formalism?
Chapter 9: Cinema in an International Frame. The International Auteur Cinema ä Auteurism ä Film is an art ä The director as artist ä 1950s-1960s ä Emergence.
~ Apolitical – reflected new acceptance of leisure and consumption Government sponsored first time directors New generation of directors:
Discuss the relation between scholarship, criticism and production in filmmaking and discuss its impact on film style.
The Rebirth of Modern Film. The French New Wave (“Le Nouvelle Vague”) movement is primarily placed in the era from , but its influences span.
Movie Analysis Topics and Areas of Films to Evaluate.
1950s  Cinema – a dominant medium of cultural communication.  Major creator (inspiration) of fashions and ideas.  Popular culture and consumer boom.
POSTWAR CINEMA THE FRENCH NEW WAVE (“la nouvelle vague”)
French New Wave. French New Wave ( ) Response to French “tradition of quality” (“staged” literary scripts) Cahiers du Cinema Auteurism Rebellion.
New Wave Cinema Film Realism and Formalism. Table of Contents 1) Nouvelle vague 2) Nouvelle vague’s contribution to film realism 3) Realism or Formalism?
The close of a decade Hollywood’s attack on tv Television is now a permanent fixture Hollywood’s attack: No movies were to be shown on television.
What do you know about cinema? Cinema was born on December 1895 in Paris, France. The Lumiere brothers were the 1 st filmmakers in history.
Originated in the 1950s, published in a magazine called Cahiers du Cinema Irritated with French Cinema, seen as old-fashioned, ‘dad’s cinema’ - cinema.
Intro to Digital Editing Prof Oakes. Overview Definition and Purpose Key Components (Picture/Sound/Transitions) Narrative Continuity (Classical Cutting)
The French New Wave History and Influences. Overview Group of French film critics who became filmmakers themselves Group of French film critics who became.
 You will examine the application of an auteur and genre approach to the interpretation of films studied on the course.  There will be a full consideration.
The french new wave [la nouvelle vague] definitions and influence.
French New Wave. The French New Wave (or Le Nouvelle Vague) was a loose artistic movement whose influence on film has been as profound and enduring as.
Quick Look First studios established in 1904 – 1905 Largely unknown internationally until after WW2 The structure mimicked the American Hollywood of the.
1950’s New Wave Ayrton Mc Gurgan & Lee Chambers. Background  In the late 1950’s cinema was changing. New inventions brought about new waves.  Film attendance.
Purpose of Documentaries 1. To record, reveal, or preserve; 2. To persuade or promote 3. To analyse or interrogate 4. To express.
FILM HISTORY EUROPEAN & ASIAN POST-WAR CINEMA. BRITISH POSTWAR FILMS, 1947  1. Movement away from the semi- documentaries of the war  2. Dominated by.
New wave Focus Films Chunking Express A Bout de Souffle (Breathless)
+ French New Wave Novelle Vogue Auteur Theory It’s all about the director..
Silent Film Project. Early Film Technology Silent films were called that because there was no way of recording the sound and then matching it with the.
What is auteur theory?.
The New Wave (French: La Nouvelle Vague) was a blanket term coined by critics for a group of French filmmakers of the late 1950s and 1960s, influenced.
“I pity the French Cinema because it has no money
New Wave Cinema Jake Shepherd.
Production Techniques – Film and TV
The Auteur Theory David Lynch
Film as Art: Creativity, Technology, and Business
POST-CLASSICAL HOLLYWOOD
Introduction to French New Wave Cinema
Topics and Areas of Films to Evaluate
French Impressionism COM 320: History of Film French Impressionism
French New Wave Cinema ~
Looking at Movies.
Rebekah Moore, Alla Ivanova, Keuren Holloman
A General Movie Intro.
DOCUMENTARY AND AVANT-GARDE FILM
Auteurism In English, Auteur means ‘Author’ which is why Auterism is the theory that a film has an author, whether that be the Director, writer, producer,
Lesson 4 New Hollywood.
UNIT 2 task 3 By Matei Turcu.
French Impressionism COM 320: History of Film French Impressionism
A General Movie Intro.
Introduction to Film Studies 1: Hollywood Cinema
Mise-En-Scène The first topic in reading media texts we will be covering is Mise-En-Scène Applied mostly to film but also applicable to television and.
Terms and Cinematic Techniques
Japanese new wave cinema
What is a New Wave? The term ‘New Wave’ exists across different a range of forms. There are new waves in painting, music, fashion, literature and theatre.
INTRODUCTION TO FILM Long Take, Deep Focus.
Expressionist Mise-en-Scène
Subtlety needs improving in order to develop answers to the top bands.
Auteur Theory.
Jean-Paul Marat Jacob Kibler D-2.
Presentation transcript:

French new wave Eda Aganoglu

Shortages, lights off, curfews !Main distraction is the cinema! The occupation (1940-1944) Shortages, lights off, curfews !Main distraction is the cinema! AMERICAN FILMS German censors must approve first

Avant-garde ANDRE BAZIN FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION ERIC ROHMER

WHO RUNS THE WORLD?? CINEMA!!

It’s time to catch up! FRANCE WAS LIBERATED FROM THE GERMAN OCCUPATION 1944 FRANCE WAS LIBERATED FROM THE GERMAN OCCUPATION Blum-Brynes Agreement Liberation brought great desire of SELF-EXPRESSION, OPEN COMMUNICATION and UNDERSTANDING L’Ecran Francais It’s time to catch up!

Birth of auteur theory Another writer at the magazine who shared Bazin’s sense of aesthetics was Alexandre Astruc. In 1948 he wrote an article titled “Birth of a New Avant-Garde: The Camera as Pen”, in which he argued for cinema, like literature, to become a more personal form, in which the camera literally became a pen in the hands of a director. The article would become something of a manifesto for the New Wave generation and a first step in the development of “auteur theory”.

New wave Late 1950s to late 1960s rise of a new generation of filmmakers Directors born before WW2, postwar in adulthood Japan, Canada, England, Italy, Spain, Brazil, US (all had their new waves) Most influential group appeared in France

They claimed the auteurs existed in American cinema. Cahiers du cinema Mid 1950s, a group of young men who wrote for the Paris film journal (Cahiers du Cinema) made a habit of attacking the most artistically respected French filmmakers of the day. =Rejected the traditional French filmmaking; loved commercial Hollywood They claimed the auteurs existed in American cinema. Auteur= Usually did not literally write scripts but managed nonetheless to stamp his personality on studio products, transcending the constrains of Hollywood’s standardized system.

Some auteurs Samuel Fuller Howard Hawks Nicholas Ray Otto Preminger

Cahiers du cinema Jean-Luc Godard François Truffaut Eric Rohmer Claude Chabrol Jacques Rivette

Jean-Luc Godard “Your camera movements are ugly (referring the traditional French directors) “Your camera movements are ugly because your subjects are bad, your casts act badly because your dialogue is worthless; in a word, you don’t know how to create cinema because you no longer even know what it is.”

Cahiers du cinema Writing criticism didn’t satisfy these young men. They itched to make movies. Borrowing money from friends and filming on location, each started to shoot short films. By 1959, they had become a force to be reckoned with. In 1959… Godard- A Bout de Souffle ( Breathless) Rivette- (Paris Belongs to Us) Chabrol-Les Cousins Truffaut- (The 400 Blows) (won the Grand Prize at the Cannes Festival) The novelty and youthful vigor of these directors led journalist to nickname them la nouvelle vague- the New Wave.

CAHIERS DU CINEMA All told, the five central directors made 32 feature films between 1959 and 1966; Godard and Chabrol made 11 apiece.

Some characteristics of french new wave LOW BUDGET!! Casual look in movies instead of traditional French cinema-cinema of quality Shooting in location instead of studios (mise-en-scene actual locales) Available light instead of glossy studio lights Simple supplemental sources Flexible, portable camera equipment, leading to lots of panning and tracking shots Lightweight camera that could be handheld (in Breathless, the the cinematographer held the camera while seated in a wheelchair to fallow the protagonist)

Some characteristics of french new wave Casual humor (Truffaut’s Shoot the Piano Player) References to other films, Hollywood or European(Hitchcock is frequently cited) = Such gags, took some of the solemnity out of filmmaking and film viewing. Casual connections become too lose. (Protagonist accidentally meets with a character on street and they talk, even though he has nothing to do with the film’s narrative) Films often lack goal oriented protagonists. Films often end ambiguously (End of Breathless)

End of the era Despite the demands, the French film industry wasn’t hostile to the new wave. In 1957, cinema attendance fell of drastically, because television became more widespread. By 1959, the industry was in crisis, so the New Wave directors shot films much more quickly and cheaply. Although each New Wave director had his own production company, they got absorbed in film industry. (Ex: Godard made Contempt for a major commercial producer; Truffaut made Fahrenheit 451 for Universal; Chabrol began turning out parodies of James Bond thrillers) The exact date of the end of the era is difficult, many says it’s 1964, when the characteristic New Wave form and style had already become diffused and imitated. After 1968, the political upheavals in France altered the personal relations among the directors, the group dispersed.

Examples of some movies

Examples of some movies

Breathless (Jean-Luc godard) (1960) Best example of the movement. Although the plot is simple, the film itself is stylistically complex and revolutionary. All the trademarks of the movement (jump cuts, hand-held camerawork, a disjointed narrative, an improvised musical score, dialogue spoken directly to the camera, frequent changes of mood and pace, the use of real locations) exist.

Lead roles JEAN-PAUL BELMONDO JEAN SEBERG

Breathless informative video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Iz3JTGHRh0

Film Art, David Bordwell- Krostin Thompson Work cited Film Art, David Bordwell- Krostin Thompson http://www.theblackandblue.com/2010/03/29/the-french-new-wave-a- cinematic-revolution/ http://www.newwavefilm.com/about/history-of-french-new-wave3.shtml http://www.newwavefilm.com/new-wave-cinema-guide/nouvelle-vague- where-to-start.shtml