Two in the Wave is a documentary film that explores the friendship and rivalry between two iconic French directors, Jean-Luc Godard and François Truffaut. It delves into their shared passion for cinema and their role in shaping the French New Wave movement. This film provides an in-depth look at their personal and professional relationship, highlighting their contributions to the history of cinema.
Off Frame AKA Revolution Until Victory is a documentary that delves into the revolution and resistance movements in Palestine. It showcases the struggles faced by the people of Palestine and their fight for freedom against oppressors. The film explores the historical context of the conflict, including the civil war, the Black September events, and the prominent role of organizations like the PLO. It also examines the influence of filmmakers like Dziga Vertov and Jean-Luc Godard in capturing the spirit of revolution and resistance. Through archival footage and interviews, the documentary offers a compelling insight into the ongoing struggle of the Palestinian people.
Special agent Mott McCampbell has a mission, escorting a Japanese dignitary from JFK airport to the United Nations. A gang of stewardesses has a different plan, kidnapping! Will Mott be able to stop them in time? Find out, see 4 O’CLOCK, the underground, film-noir comedy.
The fortuitous meeting of two women to the identical first name, Lucy, who formerly loved the same man, Jonathan, induced, in this film, of the polysemous variations on the memory, art, and the difficult relationship between creation and emotional life. Dehumanized by an exclusive artistic practice, the man lost his reference marks little by little. "Lucy en miroir" wants to be, also, a shifted and transverse second reading of "The Contempt" ("Le Mépris") of Godard, by a step more plastic than analytical or conclusive.
Making of Jean Luc Godard's Alphaville (1965)
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