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nouvelle vague
[noo-vel vag]
noun
plural
nouvelles vaguesa new wave, trend, movement, phase, etc., especially in an art form.
the films of a group of young French and Italian filmmakers, beginning in the late 1950s, who emphasized conscious manipulation of film techniques and psychological probing instead of plot.
Nouvelle Vague
/ nuvɛl vaɡ /
noun
films another term for New Wave 1
51³Ô¹Ï History and Origins
Origin of nouvelle vague1
Example Sentences
Director Richard Linklater's Nouvelle Vague is described as telling the story of the making of Jean Luc Godard's 1960 classic Breathless, in the same style and spirit as the original.
With his focus on comedy and mass entertainment, Yamada has diverged from the path of the highly acclaimed “Nouvelle Vague,†or Japanese New Wave, which includes directors such as Nagisa Oshima of “In the Realm of the Senses†and Masahiro Shinoda, who directed “Ballad of Orin†— works that focused on the darker themes of sexuality and social brutality.
Starring Jean-Paul Belmondo as a brash French hooligan and Jean Seberg as the American in Paris he loves against his better judgment, “Breathless†caused a sensation when it took its place as one of the first examples of what came to be known as la Nouvelle Vague, a.k.a. the French New Wave.
The film was based on an idea by François Truffaut, another icon of the nouvelle vague, and began shooting in Paris without a script.
Simultaneously, he’d been writing, shooting and producing his own projects — most of them not in the action genre, but dramas, comedies and even a silent film inspired by Jean-Luc Godard’s nouvelle vague classic “Band of Outsiders†— aiming to build a reel and take his career into his own hands.
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