La Chinoise

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

La Chinoise

Australian DVD cover
Directed by Jean-Luc Godard
Written by Jean-Luc Godard
Starring Anne Wiazemsky
Jean-Pierre Léaud
Juliet Berto
Music by Pierre Degeyter
Michel Legrand
Franz Schubert
Karlheinz Stockhausen
Antonio Vivaldi
Cinematography Raoul Coutard
Editing by Delphine Desfons
Agnès Guillemot
Distributed by Athos Films (France)
Pennebaker Films
(USA)
Release date(s) 30 August 1967 (France)
Running time 96 min.
Language French
IMDb profile

La Chinoise (1967) was the thirteenth narrative feature film by French filmmaker Jean-Luc Godard. This is a political film that takes place at a small apartment in Paris and centers around the interactions of four students. Thematically, the film concerns late 1960s left-wing political interest in theorists/leaders Mao, Marx, Lenin, Althusser; and the role certain objects and organizations (such as Mao's Little Red Book, the French communist party, and small leftist groups) play in this group's ideology.

While not revered as one of Godard's best films (in fact, the film is not even available on VHS or DVD in the United States), La Chinoise paints an interesting picture of French youth on the eve of the May 1968 student riots.

La Chinoise is seen, for the most part, as signalling Godard's switch to his overtly political phase of the early 1970s. But while La Chinoise seems more nearly tied to real events than much of Godard's 1960s cinema (Le Petit Soldat is another example), it still paints a highly ambiguous portrait (wavering between sympathy and contempt) for the student movements, seemingly suggesting at once that the students are serious revolutionaries and confused children.

The film features regular New Wave actors Jean-Pierre Leaud and Anne Wiazemsky.

[edit] External links