Jean-Luc Godard on Subtitles And Scripts | The Dick Cavett Show
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- Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024
- Dick Cavett welcomes Academy Award winning film director Jean-Luc Godard to the show where they discuss who does the subtitling for Jean-Luc Godard's movies, whether he uses scripts and his main influences.
Date aired - October 23 1980 - Jean-Luc Godard
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Dick Cavett has been nominated for eleven Emmy awards (the most recent in 2012 for the HBO special, Mel Brooks and Dick Cavett Together Again), and won three. Spanning five decades, Dick Cavett’s television career has defined excellence in the interview format. He started at ABC in 1968, and also enjoyed success on PBS, USA, and CNBC.
His most recent television successes were the September 2014 PBS special, Dick Cavett’s Watergate, followed April 2015 by Dick Cavett’s Vietnam. He has appeared in movies, tv specials, tv commercials, and several Broadway plays. He starred in an off-Broadway production ofHellman v. McCarthy in 2014 and reprised the role at Theatre 40 in LA February 2015.
Cavett has published four books beginning with Cavett (1974) and Eye on Cavett (1983), co-authored with Christopher Porterfield. His two recent books -- Talk Show: Confrontations, Pointed Commentary, and Off-Screen Secrets (2010) and Brief Encounters: Conversations, Magic moments, and Assorted Hijinks(October 2014) are both collections of his online opinion column, written for The New York Times since 2007. Additionally, he has written for The New Yorker, TV Guide, Vanity Fair, and elsewhere.
#thedickcavettshow #JeanLucGodard #DickCavett
Looking at Godard I can only think about Peter Sellers in character.
yes,yes
this is the best comment I have read in a while
@@THAdeeHARMONY Really? I don’t mean to appear mean-spirited, but isn’t that simplistic? Have you ever watch every of Godard’s films? There’s more to him than looking like Peter Sellers in character.
@@fifthbusiness1678 yeah I own and have enjoyed all of his films over the years. Just thought it was a funny comment.
😂
Godard was way ahead of his time.
He appreciated Charles Bukowski even before he became famous in America.
Also predicting that Raging Bull would be a great movie.
Yeah, in the Hank´s book Hollywood they got to know each other when Hank was in a party with Linda. Godard couldn´t stop talking and in the other day, other fellow who was also in the party tell Hank something like: "He never talks like this to anyone"
@@DonCorleone0 Right? I don’t think Dick was getting a lot of what Godard was saying in this interview and doubt he knew of Bukowski either.
really a visionary saying a scorsese movie would be good
Imagine getting Bukowski to write the subtitles for your film😭Jean-Luc and Charles….two of the greats
They were, i really admire the work of both.
Man, his english is better than 99% of french people.
And many Americans, now.
The greatest to have ever picked up a camera. Love you JLG. RIP, sir.
“Godard is a fucking bore” said Bergman & I concur.
Some of it is mind numbing
@@Warp75 why is this necessary when someone was saying rest in peace? there is a time and a place. you’re just being provocative for the sake of being provocative.
@@Warp75 i pity you and i mean that seriously.
@@Warp75 You cite a man who is infinitely more brilliant than you to spite a man who is infinitely more brilliant than you. When will you realize that you are a worm?
My favorite Godard movies (i’d like to know yours as well)
1- Band of Outsiders
2- Breathless
3- Alphaville
4- My Life to Live
5- Pierrot le Fou
“I pity the French Cinema because it has no money. I pity the American Cinema because it has no ideas” 1:45
Jean-Luc Godard
In Jean-Luc Godard's 1960 film Breathless, Parvulesco the Writer-played by fellow filmmaker Jean-Pierre Melville-utters one of the most famous lines in Godard's expansive filmography: when asked by Patricia (Jean Seberg) “what's your greatest ambition,” Parvulesco says, “to become immortal, and then die.”
Sources: Yahoo Entertainment; IMDb; Reddit
@@Gurci28 It was totally on the nose, pretty ahead of his time actually, because back then Hollywood produced some good pictures yet. Nowadays it´s all about reboots, remakes, Marvel and DC. And as rare as find gold in a mine, some really interesting movie is made once in a while. So sad!
@@DonCorleone0 "Nowadays it's all about reboots, remakes, Marvel and DC." A dark and gloomy stage. Truly sad.
Alphaville is mind numbing
RIP Jean-Luc. IMO one of the 3 most influential directors in cinema, along with Griffith and Welles.
I'm amazed to know that Cavett didn't recognize Charles Bukowski back then.
2:46 Godard’s secret to having his movies seem improvised: scripts in small notebooks
Allen probably decided to make Manhattan black and white because it was self professedly romanticizing New York, I’d imagine the nostalgic feeling that film noir gives, particularly for that generation, was probably unprecedented.
I don't think the name comes up, but the film of his that they're talking about here (then recently released) is 'Every Man for Himself' ('Sauve Qui Peut').
(6:25 - 6:32) Lost in translation -- Godard says, '...a Fritz Lang movie...,' Dick mishears it and says, 'a free song movie?' -- then Godard mishears it back, doesn't know to correct him, and just says 'Yeah'. 😁
But those "premature free song movies" are also a hoot.
He said frisson
@@SA-ff9uc Ah - thanks. So it was 'frisson' that Dick misheard 'Fritz Lang' as.
He's right raging bull is beautiful
Yup. His anticipation that it would be was correct. It was released about a month after this interview aired.
Word is Allen's film "Manhattan" was filmed with colour film stock then they took out the colour in post, where as Scorsese's "Raging Bull" was filmed directly with actual black & white film stock. This is why there is a noticeable difference in look according to Francis F. Coppola which he based his decision for what to use for "Rumble Fish". He's choose Allen's colour transformed to b&w.
A true creative filmmaker, recording his times ✨
Goddard entered the pantheon of great directors & the critics sent in the lions.
Charles Bukowski and Jean-Luc Godard. What a fantastic combination.
5 Favorite films by Godard:
1. Histoire(s) du Cinema
2. Ici et Ailleurs / Here and Everywhere
3. Six fois Deux
4. Nouvelle Vague
5. Numero Deux / Number Two
What are yours?
Stanley Tucci's impression of Godard is spot on
No way! Lol. I was not expecting that answer.
You mean, that it was Bukowski who did the subtitles?
Oh how I love this!
How sarcastic!!! lots of respect Jean Luc. touché!
have nothing against the other celebs that were on this show but is this channel ever going to show the Dick Cavett shows where he interviews Jackie Gleason or Art Carney? How about any Honeymooners actors that were part of the main cast? These are rarities much like the other ones.
rip
This aired on my 7th birthday.
first
I want this to be shown in screenwriting classes and workshops.
I can picture Peter Sellers doing an impression of him.
I have nothing against the other celebs that were on this show but is this channel ever going to show the Dick Cavett shows where he interviews Art Carney or Jackie Gleason? I don’t have Decades.
The ending to this is amazing
Yes, there's never silences in an interview :) great.
Jean Luc Picard?? Whaa!
Godard: I wish I could just introduce foreign films to an American audience.
Netflix: *I believe I can be of assistance!*
I don't think you understood what he meant
@@mrdoge4895 Godard's Image Book was on Netflix for a while, actually.
@@Marcel_Audubon I think a precedent for the kind of thing he was saying he'd like to see for movies that are shown to audiences who speak another language would be the way broadcasts of operas are presented -- hosts will set the scene and describe what is about to happen, then let the performers take over in whatever language, without subtitles or dubbing.