AWARDS TOUT

          The latest feature from director Richard Linklater is the appropriately titled Nouvelle Vague.  In fascinating and often charming detail, it recounts the production of Jean-Luc Godard’s seminal 1960 debut, Breathless.  As a long-time fan of the French New Wave, I can’t recommend it highly enough, even if you’re not familiar with or enamored of the movement.  The movie entertains in ways that quickly establish it as a companion piece to fellow New-Waver Francois Truffaut’s Day for Night (1973; Pierre-William Glenn).

             On the cinematography front, David Chambille’s black and white images are nothing short of amazing.  I tend to judge visuals not so much by their surface but on how they make me feel.  In this instance, he pulled off a spectacular double play.  Shot in period-faithful 1.37 aspect ratio (mostly with the Sony Venice 2 and a smattering of Ilford HP5 and Kodak 5222), he delivered a flawless recreation of not just the story’s time and place, but its defining textures and grayscales.  Being familiar with Godard’s output, I often found myself marveling at how well Chambille matched Breathless cinematographer Raoul Coutard’s eye.  Along with Darius Khondji, ASC, AFC’s work in Marty Supreme (2025; Josh Safdie), Nouvelle Vague is one of the best-shot movies of the current awards season!

            Like so many other small independents, it was shamefully under-promoted upon its release last October.  But don’t let that deter you.  If you can’t catch it in a theater, it’s currently running on Netflix.  Give it a shot!

1.6.2026

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