438
by DaveA
Up for debate, perhaps, how serious or earnest a sendoff JLG deserves--he was a bit flip/cross at times, and not always one to take himself or his legacy seriously. But he can certainly do better than some of the above prattle, which reads like, I dunno, bored college kid's shit.
This is Jean-Luc friggin' Godard we're talking about here, not some dime-a-dozen careerist who played it safe much of his life. Even if his films didn't add up to much, what he contributed to film discourse alone, since about the mid fifties on, was and is invaluable. Yeah, he and some of the other Cahiers folks did low ball a few directors (Carné, Clouzot, etc.) to negative effect--he wasn't on the money with all of his takes--but just the way in which he got people to think about films, and care about them, is no small beer. Watch his segment in Wenders's Room 666 for a sample of this. See his interview with Dick Cavett for more. I could go on.
This is the same person who cut together an official trailer for Au Hasard Balthazar. He filmed the Rolling Stones writing and recording "Sympathy for the Devil." He helped pioneer the polemic essay film as we know it. He had Jean-Pierre Melville do a cameo in his debut feature and made Anna Karina and Jean-Paul Belomondo household names. Fuckin' leftover stock from Masuline Feminine was given to Jean Eustache to shoot Santa Claus Has Blue Eyes, a great film. He documented Palestinian struggles in Ici et Ailleurs, drove Philippe Garrel around in his sports car to document the May of '68 uprisings. There's more!
It's fine, I guess, if one doesn't take to his work. I haven't seen all of it, and there are unmistakably some duds. But here's a handful of titles I think of as very good and worth hunting down:
Pierrot Le Fou
JLG/JLG: Self-Portrait in December
A Married Woman
La Gai Savoir
Every Man For Himself
All The Boys Are Named Patrick
Alphaville
Masculine Feminine
2 or 3 Things I Know About Her
My Life to Live
...some things (like Contempt and A Woman is a Woman and Week-End) I haven't seen in ages, but he left behind more than a few swell ones.
R.I.P. Jean-Luc Godard - One of the greats, without question.
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