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Richard Linklater on “New Wave” & Revisiting Film History

Linklater Imagines Godard‌ Embracing AI, Reflects on “New Wave” Creation

PARIS – Director Richard Linklater, whose latest ⁣film New Wave dramatizes the making of⁢ Jean-Luc Godard’s Breathless (1960), believes the iconoclastic filmmaker would have readily adopted artificial intelligence had it been available during his career. Speaking in Paris, the 65-year-old Linklater described Godard as someone who “would have been all over that,” embracing the technology’s potential for deconstruction and innovation.

Linklater’s⁣ New Wave isn’t simply a ancient recreation; it’s⁤ a meditation on the creative⁣ process​ itself, and a unique tribute to a pivotal moment‌ in cinematic history.​ The film’s genesis, thirteen years in the making with collaborators Vince and Holly⁢ palmo, involved a intentional​ attempt to “revive” the spirit of‍ the French New Wave filmmakers – Rohmer, Varda, Rivette, and Rossellini among them – ‌thru a process Linklater ⁤likened to a “bubble ‌of belief” and a⁣ “session of ⁢spiritualism.” The project was made possible by the support of French production and distribution company ARP Selection.

The director, ⁢also ​lauded for his ability to‍ capture authentic group dynamics and‍ the passage of time, noted the parallels between his film and François Truffaut’s The American Night (1973), which similarly⁣ stages the production​ of a⁤ film. ‌

Linklater, currently ‌based ​in Austin, Texas – which he‍ describes as​ an “alter”⁣ refuge evolving into a “libertarian lair” – emphasized his continued interest with French cinema and its influence on his work. he films, he ‌says, “like no one the group scenes, the time that ​goes, the flip-flops of fate.”

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