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The French New Wave

Submitted by SoundTeam on September 12, 2006

Category: English
Words: 1642 | Pages: 7
Views: 139
Popularity Rank: 74,831
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Jean-Luc Godard and the French New Wave
"Since 1945, French films have risen to world dominance and faltered to a point where they now need government protection to compete against Hollywood. At their best, French filmmakers have established cinemaverite, mastered literary film making and film noir, invented new wave, flirted with thrillers, and produced such unique and unclassifiable geniuses as Truffaut and Tati." Melissa Biggs makes this statement in the introduction to her book, French Films 1945-1993. This is a very true statement. The French have done many things to contribute to the world of cinema, but what will always be remembered by most is the new wave.
The new wave came along at a time where France was a nation of big studios, much like America. The studios would churn out well-crafted quality films to a public that, for the most part, enjoyed them. It was business like any other business. The government and various unions controlled the studios, and it was very difficult to get into these unions. The men and women responsible for these films were very much on the outside of this large business. They began to make films that were radically different from those of the big studios and audiences loved them. The new wave became a very successful movement not just in France, but also all over the world. And they were the underdogs, the people that didn't have a lot of money (sometimes) or resources, but made films anyway.
These people were film critics and film lovers and many of them have made their mark or achieved their own style. That is what made the new wave so important, the idea of the auteur. There were one hundred new directors making films in France in the early ‘60's. Which meant
Hayes 2
that there were a lot of individual voices that blended together and others that stood above the rest, the outsiders. Melissa Biggs mentions Francois Truffaut and sights him as being a genius of the time...

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