The French New Wave was an influential film movement that emerged in post-World War 2 France. It was characterized by a celebration of the director as an auteur or artist with a unique vision. Young film critics at Cahiers du Cinema developed the theory of auteurism, analyzing directors' styles and arguing they imprinted their films with personal expression. This inspired critics like Francois Truffaut, Jean-Luc Godard, Eric Rohmer and others to make low-budget, innovative films that experimented with form and expressed their personal worldviews, launching the New Wave. The movement emphasized experimenting with techniques and paying homage to cinema history through references in their films.
The French New Wave was an influential film movement that emerged in post-World War 2 France. It was characterized by a celebration of the director as an auteur or artist with a unique vision. Young film critics at Cahiers du Cinema developed the theory of auteurism, analyzing directors' styles and arguing they imprinted their films with personal expression. This inspired critics like Francois Truffaut, Jean-Luc Godard, Eric Rohmer and others to make low-budget, innovative films that experimented with form and expressed their personal worldviews, launching the New Wave. The movement emphasized experimenting with techniques and paying homage to cinema history through references in their films.
The French New Wave was an influential film movement that emerged in post-World War 2 France. It was characterized by a celebration of the director as an auteur or artist with a unique vision. Young film critics at Cahiers du Cinema developed the theory of auteurism, analyzing directors' styles and arguing they imprinted their films with personal expression. This inspired critics like Francois Truffaut, Jean-Luc Godard, Eric Rohmer and others to make low-budget, innovative films that experimented with form and expressed their personal worldviews, launching the New Wave. The movement emphasized experimenting with techniques and paying homage to cinema history through references in their films.
The French New Wave was an influential film movement that emerged in post-World War 2 France. It was characterized by a celebration of the director as an auteur or artist with a unique vision. Young film critics at Cahiers du Cinema developed the theory of auteurism, analyzing directors' styles and arguing they imprinted their films with personal expression. This inspired critics like Francois Truffaut, Jean-Luc Godard, Eric Rohmer and others to make low-budget, innovative films that experimented with form and expressed their personal worldviews, launching the New Wave. The movement emphasized experimenting with techniques and paying homage to cinema history through references in their films.
The French Nouvelle Vague or French New Wave was one
of the two most influential film movements which took place in post-War Europe, the other being the Italian Neorealism. If the Italian movement was inherently a political movement - born out of anti-fascist resistance movements - which gave birth to a definite aesthetic paradigm, French New Wave was an aesthetic paradigm shift with ambivalent political connotations.
The apparent features of both the movement was largely
similar - low-budget filmmaking was explored, shooting in real locations instead of studio floors, shooting in natural light conditions using faster stocks, strategies of narration markedly different from the conventional and established were features which can be found in both the movements. Both the movements had a passionate engagement with the contemporary and tried to present a distinct national image on the screen; but while the Italian movement located it in the socio-historical, French New Wave was more interested in the cultural and the discursive. While in Neorealism the poor, the proletariat and the lower-class was given primacy, Parisian youth got the centrestage in French New Wave.
If we continue with the differences between the Italian
Neorealism and French New Wave, a significant difference should be the way directorial functions are imagined in the movement. In neorealism, the style of the director (and also his world-view) should be subsumed largely under the umbrella paradigm of the movement. In other words, if the style and world-view of a particular director starts to be distinct from that of his fellow directors, that would definitely begin the end of the movement. The director’s strategies of non-intervention into the reality demanded an effacement of the persona, neorealism demanded acute and systematic observation of the social reality.
The case is just the obverse in French New Wave. To be
precise, the French movement should not have a broader umbrella aesthetics because the movement was about liberating and articulating distinct style, signature and world-views of individual directors. Therefore, to understand the French New Wave, it is necessary to understand the reimagination of the role of the director as an individuated artist in post-War France.
The term “nouvelle vague” was primarily coined by
Francoise Giroud in the magazine L’Express to describe a certain youth culture in later 1950s. Later it got associated with the new cinematic movement.
It was in 1947, Alexandre Astruc wrote an essay titled ‘La
Camera Stylo: Birth of a new Avant-Garde’ where he spoke of a new artistic tendency emerging in cinema after the wars - that of considering the cinematic as a language capable of expressing the individual artist’s ideas, thoughts and obsessions. The most important figure of speech in the essay was the metaphor used in the title - that the camera was equated with the pen (stylo) had many implications. Firstly, the pen is wielded by an ‘individual artist’, not by a collective (like in theater); secondly, the pen is a medium through which the artist deals with language; thirdly, the pen in writer’s hand is not restricted to any form (she might write a poem, a journal entry, a novel, an essay); lastly, the pen also signifies a relative inexpensive tool.
Each of this implications had significant possibilities which
will be fully explored during the French New Wave. While the movement will stress on low-budget filmmaking to lighten commercial baggages to hinder the director’s expression; the movement will also try to expand the horizons of feature filmmaking to go beyond character- centric, plot-driven narratives. But most important was the concept of the director as the sole expressive artist ‘authoring’ the film through a highly self-conscious, modernist use of film-language.
That the essay was being correctly speculative of the
future would be vindicated by an influential journal within a decade. Cahiers du Cinema, spearheaded by the legendary film-theorist Andre Bazin, became the platform where a relatively younger group of film-critics consistently practiced a throughly designed ‘policy’ of film-viewing which they named ‘politique des auteur’.
This policy - not a ‘theory’ as it will be shortly
misunderstood by Anglophone film critics - maintained that if a film is a medium of art, then its artistic validity should be judged through a singular yardstick: if it is capable of expressing the artist behind it and if it is being successfully helmed to attribute the artist a distinctive personality. Thus, their ‘method’ of reading films was - by default - transformed into an endeavor of ‘reading the artistic personality’ behind the film-facade.
The policy faced severe criticism from more seasoned
and pragmatic film critics - they were not sure if cinema can be considered equivalent to more expressive mediums like literature, painting, music etc. They also argued that cinema - in its fifth decade of existence - has been thoroughly defined as a industrial, technology- intensive medium which is dominantly collective in nature; therefore, the notion of director as an expressive individuated artist is too Utopian, according to these critics. Lastly, the role of the director in this industrial team is very throughly defined and it is not easy to conclude that he is the single ‘authoritative’ figure in this hierarchy, therefore assigning him the only agency is hugely problematic.
The Cahiers group - comprising names like Francois
Truffaut, Jean-luc Godard, Eric Rohmer, Claude Chabrol, Jacques Rivette - who will be in the forefront of Nouvelle Vague movement within years responded to this criticism in a more ambitious way, they decided to prove that the director is the author within an industrial structure which is the most rigorously hierarchical and therefore can easily turn to be the most difficult terrain to prove their policy, in Hollywood.
What can be discerned as their method had implications
in the film movement they will spearhead. They located the specificity of the medium in its mise-en-scene, they way a scene is put together; logically, the person who is responsible for designing the mise-en-scene, i.e. the director, becomes the cinematic artist. In their reading of a director’s films, the Cahiers group would then identify devices used in the designing of mise-en-scenes by a director which seem unique to him, e.g. tracking shots in Hitchcock; then they would read how these devices (or motifs in contents) would recur in the oeuvre of the filmmaker, what would it mean. In this way, they would determine the signature, the unique style and the world- view of the director.
When these critics would turn filmmakers within few
years there craft would follow similar traits, only this time more self-conscious than implicit. They would hone their craft to develop unique and idiosyncratic styles and also use cinema to convey their ideas and world-view.
The Nouvelle Vague also involves a particular relationship
to and awareness of the history of cinema.
This was born out of a peculiar historical situation -
during and before the Second World War, when France was occupied by German fascists, there was an embargo on American films. After the liberation and end of the Vichy era the embargo was lifted and not only current American films but also those films which were not released for a decade flooded the Parisian halls. This simultaneity of a decade or more of American films gave the French cinephiles a unique insight into history of American films.
This was also boosted by a major institution - the
Cinematheque Francais or the French national archive curated by Henri Langlois - whose classification and opening of the archive to cinephiles gave similar insight regarding world cinema.
When the critic-turned-filmmakers made their films, they
would constantly refer to the films with an awareness of the historicity of the cinematic language. Thus, each filmmaker would - through their quotations and references - build a personalized canon of films which would give them an unique identity. Therefore, the French New Wave filmmakers would function like advanced critics and readers of cinema giving birth - after five decades of history of cinema - to the films of a cinephile generation.
Theoretically, this peculiar way of making films through
references and quotations would give birth to an intertextual cinema where one text would act like a portal to a network of other films. Naturally, these engaged filmmakers would demand a similarly engaged and cinephilic way of viewing films.
Thus, not only a single film might act as recalling of other
films or genres; even a singular device, e.g. a close-up or an iris-in, might also consciously recall histories of the particular devices. In this way, cinematic language ceased to be a transparent window to reality and turned into a materiality with its own history. Thus, in French New Wave films we often have a double-take - a film would be looking simultaneously looking at both the social real and the artifice of texts.
Thus, often a director can be identified with his personal
canons of films and filmmakers (identified through their quotations and references). The Cahiers group - notorious for their irreverence to senior filmmakers - had their personal pantheon of respected paternal filmmakers like Jean Renoir, Jean Rouch, Roberto Rossellini, Robert Bresson, Jacques Tati, Jean Vigo, Jean-Pierre Mieville, Ingmar Bergman etc. Thus, in Godard’s films often cameos by senior filmmakers like Mieville (in Breathless), Fritz Lang (as himself in Contempt) and Samuel Fuller (as himself in Pierrot Le Fou) would act as respectful tributes. The Cahiers group was respectful to many Classical Hollywood filmmakers, but one can particularly mention their immense respect and fondness for Orson Welles and Alfred Hitchcock (with whom Truffaut had a memorable conversation which was later published as a book).
Another key essay which might be considered as an
prologue to the French New Wave is Francois Truffaut’s polemical essay titled ‘A Certain Tendency in French Cinema’. Truffaut was known to be a passionate and infamously dismissive critic of French cinema (leading to the barring of his entry to the Cannes Film Festival the year before he won over the same venue with his first film). This essay can now be read as a sort of manifesto to the movement which will follow. It is not directly a manifesto because it does not envision a possible cinema, rather it delineates the essayist’s impatience regarding contemporary French cinema.
These films were often pejoratively called ‘Cinema du
Papa’ (Daddies’ Cinema) or ‘Tradition of Quality’ films by the cinephiles. Since after the war - among other infrastructures - the film industries were severely damaged in Europe, there developed a system of co- productions among industries of many European countries. Only thus a certain quality of production could have been ensured which will generate revenue in more than one countries. This resulted in a cross-national pool of technicians but in the cost of national specificities of films, because often these films would get itself constricted to lavishly built aristocratic-bourgeois interiors which might look familiar to audiences of different nationalities. Truffaut’s critique of these films can be summarized as the following - keeping in mind that they desired a cinema where the expressive director would be supreme
These films are technicians’ films. The films tried to
achieve a set yardstick of cinematography, set-designing, lighting which were unanimously considered to be beautiful. Described as ‘glacis de la lumierre’ (cold light), these look appeared lifeless and inexpressive to the new cinephiles.
These films were screenwriter’s films. Often, the films
were adapted from recognized literary classics or bestsellers where the screenwriters only goal is to match the literary standards of the source materials. Thus, the artistic goal seemed to be a sort of pre-given and the purpose of adaptation or interpretation non-existent. The director merely acts as a translator of the literary classics. To Truffaut, the literary form of the screenplay cannot attain the artistic heights of cinematic art, neither can the literary source claim the quality of the cinematic product.
On hindsight, one can describe the essay as a strategic
step to delineate a certain vacuum in the contemporary French scene, that of an expressive personal cinema where the directorial style and expression would be hold paramount.
Therefore, when these critics turned into filmmakers
within a few years, there was a deluge of idiosyncratic and often eccentric films. Francois Truffaut’s first full- length feature film would therefore dare to attempt something hitherto not attempted in cinema - an autobiographical account of the director’s childhood which also refers to Jean Vigo’s Zero du Conduit. Truffaut’s 400 Blows almost announced the onset of French New Wave, though historians have traced beginnings to earlier films by other directors.
Similarly, Jean-luc Godard’s first film was eccentric in an
extreme way, bringing a directorial vision of cinema almost unseen after the advent of sound cinema. Breathless was many things simultaneously - a genre film made in shoestring budget, an essay on cinema which is also exploring shooting in real locations with available lighting, a vehicle of the director’s ideas and contemplations on a number of issues, a tribute to Hollywood B-movies.
Apart from the critics turned filmmakers of the Cahiers
group, there were also a distinct group of directors - namely Alain Resnais, Agnes Varda, Jacques Demy, Chris Marker etc - who were more experienced and intellectually inclined. The ‘Left Bank’ group, the name they were often clubbed under, also announced itself through Resnais’s collaboration with novelist-screenplay writer Margarit Duras in Hiroshima mon Amour, which presented a completely different model of correspondence with literature and cinematic contemplation.
The French New Wave tacitly exploited the subsidies and
advances issued by the French government for new filmmakers and presented a mode of production which was relatively non-conventional. Thus, one filmmaker might be an actor, writer or assistant to another maker’s production. Therefore, though the artistic vision would be firmly ascribed to a single person, the overall making would present a largely collaborative endeavor. Instead of hiring studio floors, often a friend’s apartment would be used. Films would often refer to films made by other comrade filmmakers, even in the extreme case of Truffaut referring to Paris nous Appartient, which was still under production, in his first film.
The French New Wave also rejuvenated cinema by
drawing inspirations from newer sources. When Godard collaborated with cinematographer Raoul Coutard, the primary reason was that Coutard was a wartime newsreel cinematographer, thus having the reflexes and experience of filming non-fiction quickly under stressful condition with meager means - a condition which the filmmaker wished to be in in his first film.
Godard’s infamous myth of shooting without scripts and
New Wave’s legendary methods of improvisation hints at two different tendencies; while the former attests the directors zeal towards absolute control - the crew- members having minimum idea of what is to be shot in any given schedule, the latter tries to eschew the rigorous industrial scheduling and planning and not only emphasizing on spontaneity and liveliness but also a ready state of mind of the collaborators. There were also an attempt to stretch the limits of decisiveness and creativity beyond the production phase, as evident in the famous use of ‘jump cuts’ in Breathless during the editing to impart a more suitable rhythm and desperation to the film.
The term ‘nouvelle vague’ was coined not to describe the
cinematic in particular but to describe an overall new post-war youth culture in Paris. French New Wave therefore presented not only a new battalion of aggressive filmmakers, but also a brand new set of actors and stars - like Anna Karina, Jeanne Moreau, Jean-Paul Belmondo, Jean-Pierre Leaud - who brought forth a new style of cinematic acting and star personas and became cultural icons of a certain era. But definitely the most important stars of the movement was the directors, whose thoroughly personal visions rejuvenated Art Cinema as the cinema of the ‘Auteurs’ for decades to come.
While the Italian Neorealism had provided the template
of cinema exploring and re-exploring social realities hitherto unrepresented or reified, the French New Wave had been a constant source of inspiration and provider of methods wherever and whenever an industry has turned moribund, lacking in ideas and imagination and mired in rigorous production structures. The New Wave reminds that cinema must have the ability to articulate concerns of newer generations of filmmakers while also recalling forgotten moments in the past when cinema was jubilant in ideas and executions. Thus, almost all new cinemas till date has been bearing the legacies of these two movements in one way or the other.
While French New Wave refreshed cinematic modernism
after the silent avant-gardes of 1920s in its reflexive self- consciousness and repertoire of devices, critics also finds postmodernist tendencies in its deliberate mixing of high and low art, in its simultaneous enthusiasm regarding pop art on one hand and novelistic contemplation on the other. But the main achievement of French New Wave is its ability to expand the scope and devices of cinema beyond the culturally decided at any moment along with keeping its means cheaper and meager.