#jean pierre leaud icons
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jpgcore · 3 months ago
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lecineaste · 6 months ago
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Masculin Féminin by Jean-Luc Godard
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lovefrenchisbetter · 10 months ago
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grlsbian · 2 years ago
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oh to be a teenager during the french new wave
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s0uvlakii · 3 years ago
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random icons
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namdosan · 4 years ago
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moreaususername · 3 years ago
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edit of Jean-Pierre Léaud smoking in “Masculin, Féminin”
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sorens2015 · 3 years ago
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JP Léaud
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ludmilachaibemachado · 4 years ago
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Jean-Pierre & Chantal Goya❤️Masculin Feminine. 1966 directed by Jean-Luc Godard
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larevuedecinema · 5 years ago
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last shot
Antoine's famous last look into the camera is how Truffaut’s masterpiece The 400 Blows ends and has been discussed by film writers and filmmakers alike. It is also just the beginning of an astounding career for Jean-Pierre Léaud who became the golden boy of the Nouvelle Vague.
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brianstormx · 6 years ago
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❁ like or reblog this post if you download any of these icons 

❁ feel free to make requests
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lecineaste · 6 months ago
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Masculin Féminin by Jean-Luc Godard
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albertserra · 2 years ago
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kinda love the way jean pierre leaud went all the way to nyc for a nyff q&a w albert serra for la mort de louis xiv but even in his old age as an internationally recognized film icon he didnt know english and had an interpreter. good for him death to america 
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streamondemand · 3 years ago
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Francois Truffaut's 'Bed and Board' on Criterion Channel
Francois Truffaut’s ‘Bed and Board’ on Criterion Channel
Bed and Board (France, 1970), the fourth film in François Truffaut’s quasi-autobiographical Antoine Doinel cycle, finds the idealistic child-man (played by Truffaut’s alter-ego and French New Wave icon Jean-Pierre Leaud) married to his sweetheart Christine (Claude Jade) and still plugging away at odd jobs. When his experiments in the florist trade burn his bouquets to a smoky black ruin he…
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panicdots · 3 years ago
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Latest Movie Release: My Dick Smells like Cheese and fish
Latest Movie Release: My Dick Smells like Cheese and fish
A meditation on the French new wave film movement, MA BITE SENT LE FROMAGE ET LE POISSON stylistically pays homage to the icons of the movement, including its head figure, Jean Luc Godard, and Jean Pierre Leaud, one of the most popular actors of the movement. Credits: TheMovieDb.
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hadarlaskey · 4 years ago
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Why I love Maggie Cheung’s performance in Irma Vep
A number of pleasant exceptions emerge throughout Olivier Assayas’ 1996 film, Irma Vep. First and foremost, Chinese actor Maggie Cheung stands out as the central character – playing herself – in the French production of a film within a film. To witness an Asian star carrying the weight of the title character spoke volumes back then considering the reality of today: Asian actors represent one per cent of Hollywood’s leading roles.
And, arguably, Irma Vep plays out like a dual valentine to French cinema and to Cheung herself – not only from Assayas, who was romantically involved with his lead during production, but also from the film itself, in which the fictional director and costume designer are both enamoured with Cheung. It’s easy to see why: Irma Vep wouldn’t be what it is without Cheung, who slips perfectly into the character’s black bodysuit (more on that iconic look later).
The story unfolds in Paris, where Cheung arrives later than expected and jet-lagged from Hong Kong. She finds herself in a film exec’s office where tensions are running high: the camera follows a production team frantically trying to source funding for Irma Vep. After seeing her action films in Morocco, the director of the film, René Vidal (Jean-Pierre Leaud), casts Cheung as Irma Vep – an anagram of vampire – in a remake of the classic 1915 Louis Feiullade series, Les Vampires.
“You can be Irma Vep because you have the grace,” he admits to her enthusiastically during their first meeting, echoing a statement Assayas once made about Cheung: “[She is] an up-to-date version of an old-fashioned movie star.”
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Indeed, Cheung straddles present and past seamlessly, mixing silent era poise with mid-’90s cool. During this time, French cinema struggled to rediscover its identity amidst the force majeure of American movies. As costume designer Zoe (Natalie Richard) tells Cheung, “I don’t like American films. Too much decoration. Too much money. But why? For what?” As the self-styled auteur Vidal, Leaud personifies the French New Wave. Meanwhile, Cheung is an outsider who barely speaks French, adding unconventional charm to this playful plot. As the three-day shoot gradually descends into chaos, she remains a picture of calmness as she rolls with the punches of the disgruntled crew.
This is further evidenced in the sex shop scene where Zoe fits Cheung for her skin-tight latex suit (inspired by Michelle Pfeiffer’s Catwoman costume in Batman Returns). As she’s zipped in, the transformation from Cheung to Irma Vep is nearly complete. And this despite the disorder all around her: Zoe’s chain-smoking; conversations which aren’t translated for her; and constant fussing over the outfit. All the while, Zoe’s affection for Cheung grows.
Back in her hotel, Cheung cuts a bored and lonely figure. Sonic Youth’s ‘Tunic (Song for Karen)’ foreshadows a rebellious and subversive act: “Goodbye Hollywood,” Kim Gordon sings, as Cheung finds herself in Irma Vep’s clothes, prowling the halls and stalking the hotel staff and guests. Cheung sneaks into another woman’s room and steals some jewellery that’s dangling from the bathroom sink. After slinking away, she takes the loot to the roof and tosses it to the ground, literally taking meta-method acting to new heights. Where does Cheung end and Irma Vep begin?
Shortly after, Vidal has a nervous breakdown and is replaced by a decidedly more patriotic director, José Mirano (Lou Castel). He removes Cheung from the starring role and casts a French actor named Laure (Nathalie Boutefeu) as Irma Vep. How could anyone else be Irma Vep other than Maggie Cheung? (This question equally applies to the upcoming eight-part TV remake starring Alicia Vikander.)
It doesn’t matter at this point. Cheung leaves Paris to meet with Ridley Scott in New York. In real life, the actor would later garner international critical acclaim in future roles such as In the Mood for Love and Clean. Life has a funny way of imitating art.
The post Why I love Maggie Cheung’s performance in Irma Vep appeared first on Little White Lies.
source https://lwlies.com/articles/maggie-cheung-irma-vep-performance/
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