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    • The 400 Blows (Les Quatre Cents Coups) (1959) Essential Films - The 400 Blows. What is there to say about The 400 Blows that hasn’t already been said? It’s stunning, beautiful, heartbreaking, despairing, hopeful and liberating all at once.
    • Breathless (A bout de souffle) (1960) Breathless - How World War II Changed Cinema. Breathless is largely regarded as the most defining film of the French New Wave, but why?
    • Contempt (Le Mepris) (1959) Le Mepris - Restored Trailer. French New Wave filmmakers were massively inspired by the film movements that came before, including: German Expressionism, Italian Neorealism and the Golden Age of Hollywood.
    • My Life to Live (Vivre sa vie) (1962) Vivre Sa Vie - Trailer. It’s awfully hard for a movie to be more depressing than Vivre Sa Vie is. Director Jean-Luc Godard’s portrait of a young woman who becomes a prostitute is about as bleak as narrative cinema comes, but that doesn’t mean that it’s not a great film.
  1. Movements in film. The New Wave, French New Wave, or Nouvelle Vague, the inaugural New Wave cinema movement; Australian New Wave; Indian New Wave, or Parallel cinema; Japanese New Wave, or Nuberu Bagu, which also developed around the same time as the French Nouvelle Vague; Persian New Wave, or Iranian New Wave, started in the 1960s

  2. The New Wave (French: Nouvelle Vague, French pronunciation: [nuvɛl vaɡ]), also called the French New Wave, is a French art film movement that emerged in the late 1950s. The movement was characterized by its rejection of traditional filmmaking conventions in favor of experimentation and a spirit of iconoclasm .

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    • Hiroshima, Mon Amour (1959) ‘Hiroshima, mon amour’ weeps. It whimpers and bleeds sorrow from every pore that it’s gorgeous, perfect, powerful, horrifying, hellish nightmarish frames hold.
    • La Jetée (1962) An attractive proposition running at just 29 minutes long, ‘La Jetée’ represents some of the most impeccable film-making ever achieved.
    • Last Year at Marienbad (1961) And on that note comes what is equally the most fascinating and perplexing choice on this list. Alain Resnais’ 1961 masterwork has been hailed as such by some and as incomprehensible mush by so many others.
    • Playtime (1967) Another artist who made his name before the advent of the Nouvelle Vague, Jacques Tati is to French comedy what Charlie Chaplin remains to silent cinema.
  4. 1. Breathless. 1960 1h 30m Not Rated. 7.7 (88K) Rate. A small-time crook, hunted by the authorities for a car theft and the murder a police officer, attempts to persuade a hip American journalism student to run away with him to Italy. Director Jean-Luc Godard Stars Jean-Paul Belmondo Jean Seberg Van Doude.

  5. Hiroshima Mon Amour ( 1967) dir: Alain Resnais. Les Deux Anglaises et le Continent ( Two English Girls, 1971) dir: Francois Truffaut. L’Eau a la Bouche ( A Game for Six Lovers, 1960) dir: Jacques Doniol-Valcroze. full page top 10 list coming soon! 10 FUNNIEST NEW WAVE FILMS.

  6. Mar 8, 2020 · Categorized by french new wave directors, the post gives examples the german new flap films, comings from the most influential movement in cinemat history.

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