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Jefferson Airplane rooftop concert (House @ Pooneil Corners)
Jean-Luc Godard filmed the band on a rooftop in Midtown Manhattan (December 7, 1968)
Fascinating film essay, "Letter to Jane" (Fonda)--Godard
"See Jane Run.
See Dick Fuck Jane.
Fuck, Jane, fuck Dick!"
"Cinema is the most beautiful fraud in the world."
-Godard
8756 (Member Profile)
LOL!
Super-secret decoder key:
Godard = God damn
chemise = shit
fusil = fuck
crème fraîches = cream (ejaculate)
buté = butt
You're right; I'm a bad bad guy.
In reply to this comment by Bakalex:
EDIT : Ok, i've just got it ... Kronos, you're a bad bad guy
EDIT over the EDIT : Can you explain me how "Godard" could stand for "F**kin'" ? The first thing that Godard means to me is the name of a famous French film-maker. In another hand, "godard" should also be a very old slang word based on the old french word for "dildo" ... which is kinda closer from the initial meaning ...
BTW, your comment is absolutely NSFW for anybody who is as twisted enough to understand those french word meaning in their respective contexts ...
The Many Faces of Serious Cat II (100-200) (Blog Entry by schmawy)
^LOL!
Super-secret decoder key (Ladies, please avert your gaze):
Godard = God damn
chemise = shit
fusil = fuck
crème fraîches = cream (ejaculate)
buté = butt
You're right; I'm a bad bad guy.
The Many Faces of Serious Cat II (100-200) (Blog Entry by schmawy)
EDIT : Ok, i've just got it ... Kronos, you're a bad bad guy
EDIT over the EDIT : Can you explain me how "Godard" could stand for "F**kin'" ? The first thing that Godard means to me is the name of a famous French film-maker. In another hand, "godard" should also be a very old slang word based on the old french word for "dildo" ... which is kinda closer from the initial meaning ...
BTW, your comment is absolutely NSFW for anybody who is as twisted enough to understand those french word meaning in their respective contexts ...
schmawy (Member Profile)
D'oh! How could I forget that one! You'll have to post a gallery of all the cheese avatars some time. Just like you'll have to do everything else that everyone else tells you to do.
In reply to this comment by schmawy:
Say cheese!
In reply to this comment by kronosposeidon:
>> ^schmawy:
Thanks again, you lovely Sifters. If you'll notice there is one that is conspicuously missing.
Okay, I give. Which one? And don't be coy, or else I'll rip your Godard skull off, chemise down your neck, and futile you in your eye socket until I crème fraîches all over your buté.
EDIT: WTF is ^that? Oh, I get it: Godard lucky760 and his word filters. Using French, mon ami!? How seditious!
kronosposeidon (Member Profile)
Say cheese!
In reply to this comment by kronosposeidon:
>> ^schmawy:
Thanks again, you lovely Sifters. If you'll notice there is one that is conspicuously missing.
Okay, I give. Which one? And don't be coy, or else I'll rip your Godard skull off, chemise down your neck, and futile you in your eye socket until I crème fraîches all over your buté.
EDIT: WTF is ^that? Oh, I get it: Godard lucky760 and his word filters. Using French, mon ami!? How seditious!
The Many Faces of Serious Cat II (100-200) (Blog Entry by schmawy)
>> ^schmawy:
Thanks again, you lovely Sifters. If you'll notice there is one that is conspicuously missing.
Okay, I give. Which one? And don't be coy, or else I'll rip your Godard skull off, chemise down your neck, fusil you in your eye socket, and then crème fraîches all over your buté.
EDIT: WTF is ^that? Oh, I get it: Godard lucky760 and his word filters. Using French, mon ami!? How seditious!
Top 5 Directors? (Cinema Talk Post)
Quick list, unordered. I'll elaborate on it later:
1 - Stanley Kubrick
2 - Jean-Luc Godard
3 - Martin Scorcese
4 - Wim Wenders
5 - Alfred Hitchcok
*Yawn* Just Another Water Balloon Popping in Slow Motion
While I enjoyed the creator's use of color and lighting, and his camera technique truly allowed the characters to express their complex personalities, I found this oeuvre to be too derivative of Fellini and Godard.
Good thing for you my dick cast the vote.
David Lynch's WEIRD cigarette ad...
So... I found some more info on this ad from http://www.lynchnet.com/ads/ ---Part of the Parisienne People campaign. An ad for F.J. Burrus's Parisienne cigarettes in Switzerland. It's part of a series featuring famous directors such as Jean-Luc Godard, Enki Bilal, Emir Kusturica and Giuseppe Tornatore. The ad aired in theaters throughout Switzerland.
Stephen Chow's Pulp Fiction Parody
This is a scene from <Ahref="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_chow">Stephen Chow's Sixty Million Dollar man, his other movies included <ahref="http://www.videosift.com/video/Shaolin-Soccer">Shaolin Soccer and <ahref="http://www.videosift.com/?domains=www.videosift.com&search=Kung+Fu+Hustle">Kung Fu Hustle and he is a very well known comedian in China. The scene parodies the famous dance scene in Pulp Fiction, which was Quentin Taratino's original homage to the dance scene from Bande à part by Godard.
http://www.lovehkfilm.com/reviews/sixty_million_dollar_man.htm
Jean-Luc Godard interview (1964)
Jean-Luc Godard (born 3 December 1930 in Paris) is a French filmmaker and one of the most influential members of the Nouvelle Vague, or "French New Wave".
Born in Paris to Franco-Swiss parents, he was educated in Nyon, later studying at the Lycée Rohmer, and the Sorbonne in Paris. During his time at the Sorbonne, he became involved with the young group of filmmakers and theorists that gave birth to the New Wave.
Known for stylistic implementations that challenged, at their focus, the conventions of Hollywood cinema, he became universally recognized as the most audacious and most radical of the New Wave filmmakers. He adopted a position in filmmaking that was unambiguously political. His work reflected a fervent knowledge of film history, a comprehensive understanding of existential and Marxist philosophy, and a scholarly disposition that placed him as the lone filmmaker among the public intellectuals of the Rive Gauche.
- Wikipedia
'Bande à part' - Great Moments in Cinema
Tags changed from "jean-luc godard, nouvelle vogue, sublime" to "jean-luc godard, nouvelle vague, sublime" by gold star member James Roe.
'Bande à part' - Great Moments in Cinema
Godard can be painful. I usually prefer other films from people like Tarantino, Hartley, or Wong Kar Wai that reference Godard's quirks.
But Band of Outsiders is completely great and is NOT an ordeal.