Breathless (1959)
Runtime: 90 mins
Synopsis: Former "Cahiers du Cinéma" critic Jean-Luc Godard threw everything he had learned from years of movie watching into his debut feature--creating an enormously influential film and a seminal study of existential longing and betrayal. Within the first few minutes, Michel (Belmondo), a... Former "Cahiers du Cinéma" critic Jean-Luc Godard threw everything he had learned from years of movie watching into his debut feature--creating an enormously influential film and a seminal study of existential longing and betrayal. Within the first few minutes, Michel (Belmondo), a foul-mouthed Parisian who idolizes Humphrey Bogart, shoots a police officer and immediately becomes a fugitive on the run. He visits an ex-girlfriend and while casually charming her, he steals her money. He then gallivants through the marvelous streets of 1940s Paris, pursuing Patricia (Seberg), a blond pixie-like American selling the New York Herald Tribune on the Champs-Elysees. Michel is childlike as he pouts and whines in his fruitless attempts to seduce Patricia, then turns cold as ice as he curses her out, racing off to steal a car or meet up with some other thugs. Meanwhile, Patricia seems to seduce everybody with her youth and naivety. She is just 20-years-old, possibly pregnant, and despite the few scattered assignments she does for the paper, she is dreamy and directionless. Even so, she does not refuse Michel, though she won't commit to him. As they follow each other in and out of cafes and boutiques, sailing past the Eiffel Tower and down the grand boulevards in gorgeous stolen cars, we await what is sure to be a tragic ending. [More]
Genre: Foreign Films
Starring: Jean-Paul Belmondo, Jean Seberg
DVD Info
Release:
Oct 23, 2007
DVD Features:
- 2-Disc Set
- Full Frame - 1.33
Audio:
- Dolby Digital Mono - French
- Subtitles - English - Optional
Additional Release Materials:
- Behind The Scenes - Making Of - "Chambre 12, Hotel de Suede" (80 mins)
- Interviews - 1. Jean-Luc Godard - Director
- 2. Jean-Paul Belmondo - Star
- 3. Jean Seberg - Star
- 4. Jean-Pierre Melville - Star
- 5. Raoul Coutard - Director of Photography
- 6. Pierre Rissient - Assistant Director
- 7. D.A. Pennebaker
- Short Film - CHARLOTTE ET SON JULES (1959)
- Trailers - French Theatrical Trailer
Buy It On DVD
Reviews
A half-century has softened the impact, but 'Breathless' still holds its own.
Shot on a shoestring and none the worse for it, Jean-Luc Godard's gritty and engaging first feature had an almost revolutionary impact when first released in 1960.
This film, a first pic by a film critic, shows the immediate influence of Yank actioners and socio-psycho thrillers but has its own personal style.
Regardless of how one feels about Jean-Luc Godard's later, less accessible works, it would be hard to find a more audacious debut feature.
Even if some of Breathless remains inaccessibly arty and obtuse, it's nonetheless a film of watershed importance.
Who doesn't like Breathless? It's some kind of free-wheeling comic experiment in cool, and it works the whole way.
Godard's attention to nuance and detail makes this influential classic a must-see for any film lover.
Modern movies begin here, with Jean-Luc Godard's Breathless in 1960. No debut film since Citizen Kane in 1942 has been as influential.
Say this, in sum, for Breathless: it is certainly no cliché, in any area or sense of the word. It is more a chunk of raw drama, graphically and artfully torn with appropriately ragged edges out of the tough underbelly of modern metropolitan life.
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