Jean-Luc Godard’s King Lear: A Movie About No Thing - Summer of Shakespeare Fan Pick #2

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  • čas přidán 19. 08. 2024
  • The infamously enigmatic Godard was once foolishly asked to give his take on William Shakespeare. The results are baffling. The second fan-picked film was produced by people who loved film in the worst way, and directed by a man who hates film in the best way.
    All third party clips are used under Fair Use.
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Komentáře • 252

  • @Atomic_Mousetrap
    @Atomic_Mousetrap Před 8 lety +152

    I have to admit, at the reveal of "William Shakespeare Junior the fifth" I said "Oh for God's sake" out loud.

  • @Red0543
    @Red0543 Před 4 lety +15

    From Wikipedia:
    Budget: $1 million.
    Box office: $61,821.
    ..... Ouch...
    Also fun fact, according to this movies IMDB thing: “When he was starting out, Quentin Tarantino claimed on his CV that he had appeared in this film, as he guessed nobody would have seen it and know that he was lying.”

  • @trorisk
    @trorisk Před rokem +14

    What is crazy about Godard is that throughout his life he continued to disassemble and reassemble cinema. Unlike some directors who are ok with their style of staging, Godard has always continued to innovate. We may not like what we see, but we must recognize this constant revolution.

    • @KyleKallgrenBHH
      @KyleKallgrenBHH  Před rokem +7

      Agreed. Godard was constantly innovating, constantly on the edge of what was possible. His legacy is worth studying.

  • @klisterklister2367
    @klisterklister2367 Před rokem +11

    Godard genuinely did ”i fart in your general direction”

  • @eugeneruby433
    @eugeneruby433 Před 4 lety +30

    "Mime...mime never changes."
    That is one of the greatest lines ever written.

    • @Galvion1980
      @Galvion1980 Před 4 lety +3

      Kyle has some of the best lines of all survivors of Channel Awesome, as well as being amongst the actual decent human beings emerging from that hell-hole. Diamanda Hagan and Dominic Noble, too.

  • @PhilAndersonOutside
    @PhilAndersonOutside Před rokem +13

    Just read Molly Ringwold’s article in The New Yorker about making this film. Definitely worth reading her perspective. Once describing Goddard as “the puzzle I couldn’t finish, but couldn’t put away.”

  • @TonyGoldmark
    @TonyGoldmark Před 8 lety +162

    2:23 AAAAGH IT'S GIANT MARINA ABRAMOVIC! THE CITY IS DOOMED!

    • @Redem10
      @Redem10 Před 8 lety +21

      Marina Abramovic vs Godzilla...I'd watch it

    • @doughboydevito4529
      @doughboydevito4529 Před 8 lety +16

      +Tony Goldmark
      Auuuugh! She's going to... Make art that some consider groundbreaking and revolutionary while others will consider it pretentious and weird as hell! Run!

    • @SuperMegaPeanut
      @SuperMegaPeanut Před 8 lety +11

      She would just sit down and stare at him... Yeah, I'd watch it!

    • @dubbingsync
      @dubbingsync Před 8 lety +7

      +Redem10 it's not going to be much of a fight. Either She'll just stand there and take any abuse only to step forward or she'll just stare at Godzilla. Of course maybe she'll try and stab the gaps between Godzilla's hands but that's about as aggressive as she'll get.
      Well going by what I remember about her anyway.

    • @Redem10
      @Redem10 Před 8 lety +2

      It will be seven hours long!

  • @sonofan403
    @sonofan403 Před 8 lety +62

    Seriously Kyle, never stop holding your brows high. We need this kind of film analysis on youtube.

  • @SamJamwich1
    @SamJamwich1 Před 6 lety +32

    An hour and half of a director trolling his clueless producer. A Godard film then.

  • @murciadoxial8056
    @murciadoxial8056 Před 6 lety +9

    the fact that we live in a timeline where the arnold schwarzenegger king lear movie is just a poster in jurassic park 2 and not a real thing is a clear evidence that we truly live in the darkest timeline

  • @Demosthenes6666
    @Demosthenes6666 Před 8 lety +87

    The black title card flashes are giving me very uncomfortable Evangelion vibes. I'd be sitting through the movie and halfway expecting to see "Absolute Terror Field" flash by.

    • @daemon3582
      @daemon3582 Před 3 lety +3

      Fitting, considering Evangelion's influence from the French New Wave

  • @TheHeroOfTomorrow
    @TheHeroOfTomorrow Před 8 lety +54

    "William Shakespeare Jr. V," friend of Mr. Dr. Professor Patrick, no doubt.

  • @JayFingers
    @JayFingers Před 2 lety +8

    "It's an hour and a half of a brilliant director trolling his producer." Why yes - Godard is gonna Godard. 🤣🤣🤣

    • @jbvader721
      @jbvader721 Před 2 lety +3

      Kinda confirms the theory that Golan and Globus didn't even bother watching Godard's films.

  • @1987MartinT
    @1987MartinT Před 8 lety +20

    To quote the great Herschel Shmoikel Pinchas Yerucham Krustofsky: "What the hell was that?"

  • @nathanplante4570
    @nathanplante4570 Před rokem +16

    Cannon: "Godard's gonna make King Lear for us!"
    Godard: "Lmao Fuck you."
    RIP King 1930-2022

    • @Phished123
      @Phished123 Před rokem +3

      Its actually more like
      Goddard: "oh yeah, i'll MAKE King Lear, aright"

    • @christopherwall2121
      @christopherwall2121 Před rokem

      @@Phished123 cue the wildest Tim Curry laugh you can imagine

  • @SamAronow
    @SamAronow Před 8 lety +29

    HOLY SHIT YOU PRONOUNCED MENAHEM GOLAN CORRECTLY. YOU HAVE WON MOVIE REVIEWING FOREVER.

  • @connorbible1898
    @connorbible1898 Před 8 lety +32

    Still a better role for Molly Ringwald than Jem and the Holograms.

  • @lamecasuelas2
    @lamecasuelas2 Před 8 lety +11

    Looks like Goddard had a ton of fun doing this

  • @GenreChowderStudios
    @GenreChowderStudios Před 7 lety +5

    I love when Kyle brings up a name like I'm supposed to know who it is, and I, uncultured savage that I am, just stare blankly at the screen while secretly hoping he brings up something I can recognize.

  • @its-morbintime
    @its-morbintime Před 7 lety +8

    5:54 - There are so many reasons I laugh at that. I have this wonderful image of a confused Sound Engineer/Mixer/Recordist being told that Jean Luc Godard wants a fart sound effect for his WIlliam Shakespeare adaptation, the sound itself being so cartoony, the looks on the faces of arthouse film fans as soon as that happens and the simple fact that Golan Globus saw that...and didn't think anything was wrong - they just rolled with it.

  • @MrBenjarming
    @MrBenjarming Před 8 lety +14

    Now you know we gotta see that King of Texas review.

  • @najhoant
    @najhoant Před 5 lety +5

    2:43 Also during this time, they produced a Dutch movie, ”De anslaag” (”The Assault”), which won both the Oscar and Golden Globe for Best Foreign Language Film

  • @dylanchouinard6141
    @dylanchouinard6141 Před 5 lety +9

    Actually, the descendants of a famous author (not necessarily Shakespeare) wandering a post-apocalyptic wasteland could be an interesting idea

  • @lgbs727
    @lgbs727 Před 7 lety +22

    This makes me really want to watch this film and be puzzled and frustrated to death. Sounds like the ultimate movie.

    • @jbvader721
      @jbvader721 Před 7 lety +2

      Lucas Silva You could say that about a lot of Jean Luc Godard's filmography.

    • @lgbs727
      @lgbs727 Před 7 lety +1

      True, but one thing is watching Breathless and another is watching Goodbye to Language.

  • @docdave15
    @docdave15 Před 4 lety +2

    "And that, Monsieur Golan, is why I didn't make your movie. NEHNEHNEHNEHNEHNEH! *fart*"
    Maybe it's the editing, the delivering but goddamn does that make me laugh!

  • @Nolaris3
    @Nolaris3 Před rokem +5

    RIP Jean-Luc Godard

  • @tenaciousrodent6251
    @tenaciousrodent6251 Před 8 lety +21

    So it's basically "Daddy, would you like some sausage?" repeated for ninety minutes? AAAARRRT!!!!Btw: I'm working on a revolutionary work of art. It's named "2016" and it's a TV that sprays warm, fresh pig shit into the face of everyone stupid enough to use the remote I leave on top of it.

  • @StrangeGamer859
    @StrangeGamer859 Před 8 lety +42

    Ok next year do King of Texas

  • @ryanjavierortega8513
    @ryanjavierortega8513 Před 8 lety +9

    I've never before commented on a video such as this before, though I felt your reading of Godard's King Lear warranted my doing so, because you deserve praise for having developed such an analysis via a Derridean template while concurrently presenting an original method of analysis;you've also done an excellent job connecting the aesthetic ideology of Godard and his recent work with Lear, which as you no doubt are aware was made during his return to narrative filmmaking (Godard's style of narrative), which explicates Lear in an original way - this is difficult to do with Godard. I wrote an Article on Week-End, and while it met with success, it did so with New Historcists, and this wasn't terribly surprising, as my work ended up being about Bloom's theory of influence, The Marshall Plan, Post-War Cinema production in France, the link it shared with Post-War automobile production, and economics, which is a way of saying I failed at my intended goal....So then, from the author of a failure to the author of a success, I'd like to say congratulations and thank you for providing such an insightful reading of this Picture.

  • @juanpabloperez6118
    @juanpabloperez6118 Před 6 lety +21

    Godard is a genius and a master. I don't get what's not to like.

    • @antoniocarlosgoncalvesfilho
      @antoniocarlosgoncalvesfilho Před 2 lety +2

      Is not so much a matter of genius or mastery. One can appreciate how brilliant his work is, while also not particularly appreciating the act of actually watching his films. Is not even a matter of being "entertain", per se. I'm not "entertain" by Haneke Funny Games, but I´m envolved with the way the film expresses its themes, it makes me ponder about my relationship with the media I consume. It changes my perspectives in many ways. Godard, or any other artists, might be brilliant, but they also might not move me with their brilliance. Is an aspect of art that I find entirerly subjective

    • @kjmiller1959
      @kjmiller1959 Před 7 měsíci

      Le Chinese is not to like.

  • @Gothamlk
    @Gothamlk Před 8 lety +41

    Kyle, as a Frenchman I have to say, the French at the beginning of the video is extremely poor and hilarious.
    I hope it keeps up. Going back to the video.

    • @KyleKallgrenBHH
      @KyleKallgrenBHH  Před 8 lety +50

      I've given up on ever trying to type correct French. Fuck it all.

    • @QuikVidGuy
      @QuikVidGuy Před 8 lety +2

      I hope it was better in La Belle et La Bete... aside from pronouncing the t in "et" during part 1

    • @Cybjon
      @Cybjon Před 8 lety

      Yeah, but it's Anglofied structure is what makes it funny! To a native English speaker, anyway...

  • @reesesbeanses
    @reesesbeanses Před 6 lety +3

    I like the part of the video where the voiceover says “Patrick Stewart”and then there’s just incomprehensible screaming while Professor X cosplays Gandalf

  • @AdaptiveReasoning
    @AdaptiveReasoning Před 8 lety +128

    I feel like movies like this one can only really be worth something to me if a Kyle Kallgren or an art book explains to me what the artist was _trying_ to say. 99.9% of the time I am ill equipped to understand whatever obtuse language the artist is trying to use. I am generally ignorant, I rarely know where to start to correct that with this type of art film. I'm not sure if that's anyone's failure so much that the languages are too specialized.

    • @SatansBestBuddy1
      @SatansBestBuddy1 Před 8 lety +63

      It's mostly about context, and linking ideas together. In this movie, a man farts at another man. Doesn't say much. But when it's the "director" farting at "Shakespeare", ie when the scene is given proper context, the idea behind it is made clearer, and now you can link that idea with the others sprinkled throughout the movie.
      Most mainstream movies try really, really, REALLY hard to make sure context is never needed outside of the movie, so you can watch the movie and have all the context you need to understand what's going on within the movie itself. Not to say you can't gain a deeper understanding by applying context outside of the movie, just that everything you need to understand it is already present, which is an idea that art films like this one don't like much.
      They want you to engage with the material at a deeper level, to think about who's behind the making of the film, the legacy involved in the film. Which requires watching the movie with the intent of understanding it, which requires thinking about individual scenes and lines and applying them to the whole to see how it all fits, which is quite simply Way Too Much Work for the majority of movie watchers.
      So no, it's nobody's failure, and yes, the languages are very specialized. If you aren't feeding yourself on a diet of French new wave cinema, then this movie is literally speaking a language you can't understand. And requires a lot of work to decode, which our friend Kyle here has done for our viewing pleasure.
      If you want to do it, too, then you can, it just requires work, and it'll get easier the more you do it, but it'll still be work even after the thousandth movie.

    • @sebdrum92
      @sebdrum92 Před 4 lety +1

      You really don't need to. Half the time is just the "artist" more concerned about himself and his ego than about telling a story. That's not to say Goddard isn't a fine director it's just that most of these indie directors fall into the trap of trying too force their ideas into the story instead of having the story express its ideas through characters and plot, and often times is because they fail to understand that great directors like Goddard know how to right classic stories, before subverting their structure.

    • @theohaegele9011
      @theohaegele9011 Před 3 lety

      @@SatansBestBuddy1 I know this is years old but I'd just like to thank you for this marvelous explanation.

    • @KaitainCPS
      @KaitainCPS Před rokem +1

      A lot of the time an artist can appear to have posed a brilliant intellectual puzzle for the audience that, in fact, will have no solution at all, but the audience themselves will be convinced that it has one, and set about trying to solve it, never once questioning the brilliance of the director's vision.

  • @benholman8860
    @benholman8860 Před 8 lety +6

    LMAO The Cannon group does Shakespeare and arthouse in one failed experiment. I love it.

  • @StriderWolf
    @StriderWolf Před 8 lety +28

    so is there an Electric Boogaloo sequel to this film as well?

    • @malloryelmo
      @malloryelmo Před 7 lety +17

      King Lear 2: Le Boogaloo Electrique de la Mort de la Langue

  • @jmalmsten
    @jmalmsten Před 8 lety +14

    Somehow I think there is a lot in common between Cannon and deLaurentis... Both made most of its money through mainstream "trash"... but wanted desperately to be one of the major studios in all respects. Sinking vast amounts of money into what we call follies... The Bible, King Kong.... they even enlisted a cooky american arthouse director to make an adaptation of a giant best seller of an epic sci fi epos... after it had been shot down whilst in the care of another european cooky arthouse filmmaker...
    I hope that one day, just as the builders of Swamp Castle, there comes a crazy italian that actually succeeds in this ambition...
    or maybe I have missed out on someone already doing it...

    • @AniGreat-fn2dh
      @AniGreat-fn2dh Před 2 měsíci

      Who were those kooky American/European arthouse filmmakers who attempted to make a sci-fi epic adaptation?

    • @padzzz9377
      @padzzz9377 Před měsícem

      @@AniGreat-fn2dhDino De Laurentis production of David Lynch’s Dune. Not sure what he meant by «cookie europeen arthouse director», but could be he meant Jodorovsky who also attempted Dune adoptation, although Jodorovsky is chilean, not europeen😅

  • @particleboy3584
    @particleboy3584 Před rokem +3

    Nicely edited. Well thought out. You know your cinema history, which is quite refreshing. I personally like the film but will admit the first time I saw it I wanted to pull my hair out. Would love to find it on NTSC DVD.

  • @davidlow862
    @davidlow862 Před 7 lety +11

    I found this movie on you tube, and I'm kind of digging it. True, it makes no sense, but sometimes you just need to watch a movie full of confused stuff happening, and nothing else.

  • @vivianviolet
    @vivianviolet Před 8 lety +8

    this is REALLY reminding me of the themes explored in MGS V the phantom pain, and... now I kind of want to see Kyle's take on metal gear's storytelling

    • @jbvader721
      @jbvader721 Před 8 lety +1

      Maybe the next "Between the Lines" episode.

  • @hannahmoran2149
    @hannahmoran2149 Před 8 lety +2

    When I got the notification that you'd posted a new video, I literally yelled, "YES MY BOY IS BACK!" This was a really fascinating look at an adaptation I didn't really know that much about. Keep it up!

  • @eugeneruby433
    @eugeneruby433 Před 6 lety +1

    "Mime... Mime never changes" is one of the best jokes you've ever used. It's humor like that, along with the extremely interesting reviews you do overall, that make me love ya, Kyle. Keep up the amazing work.

  • @SamuelFaict.Filmmaker
    @SamuelFaict.Filmmaker Před 7 lety +8

    JLG is a legend!

    • @kjmiller1959
      @kjmiller1959 Před 7 měsíci

      Some time after the greatness of Breathless he took a time-wasting detour into the ultra-experimental and the shrilly political. I guess that is legendary, in its way. He was Jeffrey Cordova, the theater genius in the 1953 The Bandwagon who at first take the show and turns it into a pompous, arty mess, before he gets enlightened and decides he wants to have fun. Oh wait. Bad analogy. Godard never got enlightened.

  • @nanardeurlambda
    @nanardeurlambda Před 3 lety +2

    Godard is kind known for that sort of bamboozling. He likes to make deals with various groups (even once with Darty, a compagny selling washing machines and the like) and producing something they would never want to distribute to an audience.

  • @FredSmith110
    @FredSmith110 Před 5 lety +2

    Thanks. You gave a very clear explanation of a difficult film (not without a few jokes to liven things up!). It makes me want to see the whole film. I like the idea that love is something so emotional that it cannot be expressed in words. Cordelia loves Lear more than words can say.

  • @karelfinn2343
    @karelfinn2343 Před 8 lety +20

    For as much as I like to pretend I'm classy and sophisticated when it comes to my taste in film, I can't express how disappointed I was when I realized this wasn't a Shakespeare adaptation set in the United Federation of Planets. Although given how much Start Trek likes to go on about the Bard, I imagine that would be somewhat mind-bending in its own right.

  • @Sigmundfruit
    @Sigmundfruit Před 8 lety +46

    you're running out of summer, Kyle

    • @KyleKallgrenBHH
      @KyleKallgrenBHH  Před 8 lety +33

      oof, don't remind me.

    • @Sigmundfruit
      @Sigmundfruit Před 8 lety +32

      +KyleKallgrenBHH whatever, I'd rather a late video than a rushed one tbh

    • @ZoanBlade90
      @ZoanBlade90 Před 8 lety +1

      +KyleKallgrenBHH 6:02 SYMBOLISM! XD

    • @brain_apostrophe_t
      @brain_apostrophe_t Před 8 lety +5

      +KyleKallgrenBHH Im in Australia. Its practically summer all year long. Keep making great videos

  • @rezandaigotsu4250
    @rezandaigotsu4250 Před 8 lety +18

    Oh Canon group, you never fail to be some kind of insane. This is a movie I need to watch now, if only to see Goddard literally dart on Shakespeare.

    • @Maradrafts
      @Maradrafts Před 8 lety +3

      I'm glad someone agrees on the Cannon Group. While resarch and educated opinions don't seem to be their strong suit, it seems there was no crazy film experiment they weren't willing to get into, and I kind of love them for it.

  • @sclogse1
    @sclogse1 Před 8 lety +5

    Cannon group sounds like a bunch of fun guys who spent most of their time on yachts in the Mediterranean having a ball coming up with stuff. Maybe more to them than meets the wallet. In an interview with Wim Wenders, which Godard tried to run, he admits he was wondering how he was going live in his old age...money wise.

    • @jbvader721
      @jbvader721 Před 7 lety

      sclogse1 Watch "Electric Boogaloo: The Wild Untold Story of Cannon Films". It's available instantly on Netflix.

  • @deathcrist2000
    @deathcrist2000 Před 8 lety +50

    So basically Godard working with Cannon is exactly like what would happen if Bowie did collaborate with Coldplay?

    • @dubbingsync
      @dubbingsync Před 8 lety +1

      By the sound of it, I think that's a good way to put it.

    • @tenaciousrodent6251
      @tenaciousrodent6251 Před 8 lety +20

      I don't think Bowie was THAT much of a troll and Coldplay is THAT stupid.

    • @deathcrist2000
      @deathcrist2000 Před 8 lety +3

      rollingstone(.)com/music/news/chris-martin-david-bowie-rejected-coldplay-collaboration-20141214

    • @tobi2731
      @tobi2731 Před 7 lety +5

      Hm... Interestingly enough both of their sounds was hugely influenced by Brian Eno.

    • @Galvion1980
      @Galvion1980 Před 4 lety +1

      @@tobi2731 Yeah, but Bowie did it RIGHT. Coldplay did it in the most watered-down, middle-of-the-road, dollarstore-U2 kind of way.

  • @bareakon
    @bareakon Před 8 lety +39

    Just as an aside, I'd like to see you discuss some Jodorowsky, Kyle.

    • @femoman
      @femoman Před 8 lety

      I'm still waiting for him to look at The Holy Mountain

    • @funkwolf1
      @funkwolf1 Před 8 lety +8

      You fool, you'll kill us all.

    • @croinkix
      @croinkix Před 8 lety

      he did in his top 20 movies of 2015

    • @tatehildyard5332
      @tatehildyard5332 Před 7 lety

      When? I've seen that video a bunch of times and recall no such discussion being done.

  • @madelinepeck9719
    @madelinepeck9719 Před 4 lety +3

    Okay BUT the Apple is actually fantastic

  • @MichelleAnnM
    @MichelleAnnM Před 8 lety +9

    I'm surprised you didn't mention that Woody Allen is briefly in this movie for no discernible reason whatsoever...

  • @aruss1
    @aruss1 Před 8 lety +2

    That Electric Boogaloo documentary is fascinating.

  • @nope1018
    @nope1018 Před 8 lety +5

    Sure, Cannon were responsible for a lot of garbage, but they were also responsible for Runaway Train; which is one of the best films I've ever seen.

    • @Lucholosabe
      @Lucholosabe Před 8 lety

      A real masterpiece, very forgotten when they make lists about the best films of the 80s.

  • @nahue2000
    @nahue2000 Před rokem +2

    Just seeing Molly Ringwald in a Godard film makes this movie something unique

  • @scottandrewhutchins
    @scottandrewhutchins Před 5 lety +5

    One of my all-time favorite films.

  • @mpaulworkman
    @mpaulworkman Před 5 lety +2

    "Mime...mime never changes. " Well done.

  • @sesfilmsllc
    @sesfilmsllc Před rokem +2

    RIP Godard.

  • @AdamYJ
    @AdamYJ Před 8 lety +6

    Of course Cordelia loved her father. She loved him like meat loves salt.

  • @jbvader721
    @jbvader721 Před 7 lety +40

    "The company that made 'Breakin' 2: Electric Boogaloo'." Oh, the horror.
    "The company that made 'Death Wish' into a franchise." The monsters.
    "The company that made Chuck Norris into an action star." Okay, that's not too bad.
    Seriously Kyle, if you wanted to make your point on how incompetent The Cannon Group was even more poignant, you should've said "The company that made 'Superman IV: The Quest for Peace'."

    • @domidextrus
      @domidextrus Před 7 lety +16

      Maybe he was trying to invoke the "Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking" comedy trope, where the last entry on the list of bad things is one that is not as bad compared to everything that preceded it.

    • @ChristopherSobieniak
      @ChristopherSobieniak Před 6 lety +1

      And told Carl Macek they wouldn't let "Robotech: The Movie" through without a few more explosions!

    • @ruthielalastor2209
      @ruthielalastor2209 Před 6 lety +6

      jbvader721 | Perhaps he just stresses they are incredibly different, not necessarily that Cannon is terrible.

    • @thrownstair
      @thrownstair Před 5 lety

      I feel like it’s more that they’re not making ‘high art’.

    • @particleboy3584
      @particleboy3584 Před rokem

      Cannon was also the company that promoted a number of great foreign films including one of my favorite films, "Lemon Popsicle." May not be famous in the States, but those who saw it remember it fondly.

  • @EpicBeard815
    @EpicBeard815 Před 8 lety +56

    I've seen 4 or 5 Godard films, and I can only come to the conclusion that he hates film, films, and filmgoers

    • @zaphero5518
      @zaphero5518 Před 8 lety +41

      (From probably the most unqualified person to discuss this) Maybe it's not film itself he hates, but rather the established formula of a film. As if he aims to create for counter-culture rather than create what he wants to make, or something in between.

    • @kimsingh3554
      @kimsingh3554 Před 6 lety +7

      EpicBeard815 There is a saying in Hindi: “ How do you expect a monkey to appreciate the taste of ginger”. If you have “seen” 4 Godard films and still have not comprehended his genius, stick to Arnie, Star Wars and “Dumb and Dumber”

    • @luismarioguerrerosanchez4747
      @luismarioguerrerosanchez4747 Před 4 lety

      @Alex Unknown Why is this wrong idea so prevalent.
      La Nouvelle Vague was a bunch of film buffs that started discussing films as the body of work of an "auteur" that they championed on american directors like Hitchcock and Howard Hawks. It was the current french cinema they criticized as being lacking of personality and experimentation as they followed the so called "french tradition of quality" that championed screenwriters adapting famous literature as opposed to directors making original or more personal films.

    • @cremetangerine82
      @cremetangerine82 Před 3 lety +1

      I know, right?
      He’s is a director I respect more than I will ever like.
      1:06 really speaks for me.
      I’m more of a Truffaut girl myself.

  • @Charuchii
    @Charuchii Před 7 lety +10

    I'd watch the shit of 2 Broke Girls featuring Marina Abramovic

  • @Patrick-th2ci
    @Patrick-th2ci Před 8 lety +6

    Godard is a cool guy

  • @NewYorkActingCoach
    @NewYorkActingCoach Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you so much for this.

  • @cherrybiscottitouille3753
    @cherrybiscottitouille3753 Před 8 lety +10

    how in the hell would Chernobyl destroy ALL HUMAN CULTURE WHAT THE FUCK

    • @giuliettarenner1343
      @giuliettarenner1343 Před 3 lety +2

      The death of beauty is also in the eye of the beholder

    • @kjmiller1959
      @kjmiller1959 Před 7 měsíci

      Well, it wouldn't. It's a mark of a story being banged out with no craft of thought.

  • @garyweisel7084
    @garyweisel7084 Před 6 lety +2

    This is a very helpful analysis! I would add that Godard's films never make perfect sense (since they cannot be boiled down to a narrative or a thesis). But, if you watch a bunch of his late films (I suggest Nortre Musique and Forever Mozart), then the ideas start to make some sense and, unfortunately, resonate even more strongly in light of recent world events (escalating technology, warfare, nationalism, and so on).

  •  Před 8 lety +5

    fuck this shit, im watching the piccard one RIGHT NOW!
    PS: tnx for that one :D

  • @helios5868
    @helios5868 Před 8 lety +2

    This reminds me of that episode of MASH where the cast hijacked the filming of a propaganda film and turned it into a Groucho Marx production that mocked the idea of propaganda films. Mocking the main character, genre, and the general who commissioned the film. It's called "Yankee Doodle Doctor" and is really worth checking out, especially with this video's context.

  • @MakiPcr
    @MakiPcr Před 7 lety +2

    Did you know 2 Shakespeares worked in Bionicle? Sue Shakespeare as Producer and Terry Shakespeare as Director, maybe Jr is their cousin

  • @Zanphos
    @Zanphos Před 6 lety

    Aside from all the really interesting ways you made this approchable and informative and the fact that i'm actually into something i never thought i would be into because of you
    I gotta say the most important thing i take away from this episode is that your eyes are REALLY striking and i don't know why that mattered so much but i felt like saying it.

  • @AlexGoldhill
    @AlexGoldhill Před 8 lety +2

    I kind of want to see how The Dom would react to this.

  • @lilacbombs_5197
    @lilacbombs_5197 Před 7 lety +3

    I love the fallout references... in fallout 4, how'd you feel about nick valentine's story, kyle?

  • @hannabelphaege3774
    @hannabelphaege3774 Před 8 lety +13

    Oh yes I remember studying Godard. I'm glad there are people with the talent and inclination to examine these things because... dear god I couldn't bear watching his entire filmography.

  • @SamuraiMujuru
    @SamuraiMujuru Před 8 lety +3

    I'd love to see your thoughts on The Bad Sleep Well, Akira Kurosawa's noir adaptation of Hamlet.

  • @Gefilta
    @Gefilta Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks. The best review I’ve seen of a Godard film I haven’t seen but I am now very keen.

  • @_Sasha_Sasha
    @_Sasha_Sasha Před 8 lety +8

    While your analysis of the 'failure to express oneself' in this film makes some sense, it seems to me that, if Godard is using this one theme as his thesis, his 'adaptation' is a shallow piece of work. Lear is about so much more than just this one idea, and to reduce the play down to such a singular message removes the play itself. Thus, Godard's constant quotations and comparisons to Lear can't work because the framework is threadbare.
    I think this is probably the kind of film I would hate.

    • @LicoriceLain
      @LicoriceLain Před 8 lety

      This is a 90 minute film where one guy randomly farts on another and random title cards pop up, so yeah.

  • @jedisquidward
    @jedisquidward Před 8 lety +4

    12:42 What is wrong with this line? Why is this used to show the producer as a fool? "Wow, he cares about his company, what an idiot." Is it because he's not an "artist?"

    • @UltimateKyuubiFox
      @UltimateKyuubiFox Před 8 lety +31

      He claimed to want nothing but the improved image of his company, meanwhile doing no research on the man he was expecting to offer it to him on a platter. He cared so little he allowed the contract to be signed on a napkin. This was his error. It's not even that he attempted to throw a bandaid at the problem. He didn't even put the effort to stick it on.

    • @jedisquidward
      @jedisquidward Před 8 lety +2

      +UltimateKyuubiFox Okay thank you

  • @IJVin
    @IJVin Před 8 lety

    The "nyeah-nyeah" visual at 14:00 made me laugh out loud.

  • @Redem10
    @Redem10 Před 8 lety +9

    Why do I keep seeing Patrick Stewart as a cowboy lately?
    Huh they are few ackward uses of french here
    Ennuyeuse is how something that is how you write something feminine and boring , Jean-luc goddard being male, ennuyant would be the correct term
    Radical being use to describe Goddard, politic and esthetic doesn't quite work because Esthètique and Politique are two female noms, but you kept Radical male, instead of adding the E they would require "politique radicale"
    Life changing as "changement de vie" don't quite work here,can't quite think of the proper equivalent, but basicaly the mistake is "Life changing" can be use to describe something as such while changement de vie would be the act of doing
    For the last one I think it be more "Mon Dieu, pourquoi est-ce que ce film de 90 minutes prends cinq heures"

  • @voltairinekropotkin5581
    @voltairinekropotkin5581 Před 8 lety +2

    "Trollface: The Motion Picture"

  • @cheezemonkeyeater
    @cheezemonkeyeater Před 6 lety

    This the sort of film where I'm thrilled that it exists, even though I'll never actually sit down at watch it. Like that CZcams video somebody made entitled, "The Theme Song From Nutshack, But Every Nutshack is Replaced By A Man Reading The Entire Script of The Bee Movie." That video, for those interested, is 13 hours long.
    The existence of such a thing just makes the world a better place by virtue of it taking a little bit of sense away from humanity's very existence.

  • @QuikVidGuy
    @QuikVidGuy Před 8 lety +4

    Godard is so clever that it just pisses me off

  • @davidcolby167
    @davidcolby167 Před 8 lety +7

    The fool! They didn't make a Shakespeare adaptation!
    THEY MADE A S.T.A.L.K.E.R ADAPTATION!

  • @NerdyWillowTree
    @NerdyWillowTree Před 2 lety +1

    This sums up perfectly why I despise Godard! Good video though.

  • @JaesadaSrisuk
    @JaesadaSrisuk Před 8 lety +1

    Never have I clicked on a notification so quickly! Have you read Eco's The Book of Legendary Lands? I wish I had that book when I was a wee, imaginative lad who played and lived in fantasy worlds more than actual life.

  • @paulmichel7519
    @paulmichel7519 Před 6 lety +4

    jlg's king lear is the best movie ever

    • @paulmichel7519
      @paulmichel7519 Před 6 lety +1

      sorry for you being blind

    • @kjmiller1959
      @kjmiller1959 Před 7 měsíci

      Sitting on a book shelf to my left is an anthology with an interview with JLG in it. In the interview, he says among other things that the film Z is useless because it wasn't made by a director who belonged to a revolutionary organization. This displays the personality type of the people who ran the Cultural Revolution in China.

  • @gnalkhere
    @gnalkhere Před rokem

    This movie is rumored for a Criterion release in the near future

  • @owenraspberry4737
    @owenraspberry4737 Před 4 lety +2

    I love this movie.

  • @JohnMetier
    @JohnMetier Před 2 měsíci

    How did Molly Ringwald get talked into this? No wonder she abandoned her carrier as an actor and fled to France for a decade or two

  • @9340Steve
    @9340Steve Před rokem

    A brilliant and hilarious review about a movie that is brilliant, hilarious and indeed watchable. I disagree , thought, that the movie insults its audiance. And how unwatchable can it be at 90 minutes total, filled with crazy, beautiful images, and a number of great actors and writers playing various stage roles, playing themselves, playing .... who knows?

  • @Shakerags
    @Shakerags Před 8 lety

    Dude, I don't mind if it becomes a summer and autumn of Shakespeare - it just means that Shakespeare gets spread across the year, and the wait for next year's list is even shorter!

  • @jimdandy2368
    @jimdandy2368 Před 8 lety +1

    Thank you for explaining this movie! The first time I saw it, the thing really pissed me off. Now at least I know why!

  • @DarkTider
    @DarkTider Před 8 lety

    Holy hell you got a lot thinner from your old videos :D Looking great!

  • @isaacboissonneau7620
    @isaacboissonneau7620 Před 8 lety +1

    It would be something indeed if someone could translate that philosophy on words into a Lovecraftian horror story or movie.

    • @Girkon
      @Girkon Před 8 lety

      I'd look at it. One of the big fads in media is melding classics with current pop culture.

  • @gregorywiederecht
    @gregorywiederecht Před 6 lety

    2:32
    Ohhhhhh!!! That's why Golan's name sounded familiar! Thank goodness for Musical Hell!

  • @Daniel-be6cj
    @Daniel-be6cj Před 6 měsíci

    "Why is this 90 minute movie 5 hours long" sounds like somebody watched "2 or 3 things I know about Her"

  • @ninfilms
    @ninfilms Před 2 lety

    Basically if this film didn't get made that $1 million could of helped with Superman 4's budget.

  • @noedenisquentindodson2977

    It was easier to watch King Lear in its entirety than to watch the first 6 minutes of this video. That being said, the remaining 8 were actually compelling.
    Also, Wittgenstein should absolutely be mentioned in this.

  • @xexious2
    @xexious2 Před 8 lety

    this whole behind the scenes story of this movie reminds me of barton fink

  • @Amaritudine
    @Amaritudine Před 8 lety

    I love the Lear story for its elegance, simplicity and forthrightness, but I don't think my imagination would cope with this... adaptation(?)
    Thanks to Kyle, I can comletely get what Godard seems to be going for, and the deconstruction/reconstitution he's doing to the original text. I still think it'd annoy the hell out of me if I actually tried to watch it, though.
    But I might just have to find me some 'King of Texas' someday soon.