HomeNewsTrendsEntertainmentFrench New Wave master Jean-Luc Godard broke the rules and changed filmmaking forever

French New Wave master Jean-Luc Godard broke the rules and changed filmmaking forever

One of the last honours Jean-Luc Godard, who passed away at 91, received was the Lifetime Achievement Award by the International Film Festival of Kerala (IFFK) last year.

September 13, 2022 / 20:42 IST
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Actor Anna Karina on posters in Paris Metro for the retrospective "Tout Godard" in February 2020. (Photo by Marcvjnicolas via Wikimedia Commons 4.0)

Four years ago, the Cannes film festival's competition jury headed by Australian actor Cate Blanchett presented a Special Palme d'Or to Jean-Luc Godard - the first in the famous festival's history - for what would be the celebrated French director's last film, The Image Book. A few days earlier, after the screening of the film at the festival, Godard had arrived unexpectedly in Cannes via Facetime to take part in a mandatory press conference for directors in the competition category.

Godard's Facetime appearance in Cannes came exactly 50 years after he had shut down the festival along with other filmmakers during the 1968 nationwide protests in France, kicked off by students. Sitting in his home in Switzerland and smoking a cigar, the French New Wave master, then 88, talked about the "courage to imagine" that kept him going.

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Three years later, another big honour came calling, this time from the International Film Festival of Kerala (IFFK), which gave Godard a Lifetime Achievement Award during its 25th edition held in March last year.

Widely regarded the enfant terrible of modern French cinema, Godard's death was reported on Tuesday, September 13, 2022. He was 91 years old.