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First Name: Carmen
(Prénom Carmen)

Screening on Film
Directed by Jean-Luc Godard.
With Maruschka Detmers, Jacques Bonnaffé, Myriem Roussel.
France/Switzerland, 1983, 35mm, color, 84 min.
French with English subtitles.

While many argue that Godard's later films pale in comparison to his seminal work from the 1960s, First Name: Carmen belies this myth. All of the classic Godard trademarks are here: fatalism, romantic scorn, socialist rhetoric, visual symbolism, tortured narcissism (with Godard himself playing Carmen's lecherous filmmaker uncle), and a healthy dose of Americanisms. Loosely based on Bizet's opera, this Carmen has its heroine rob a bank in order to fund a film she wants to make. Weaving Beethoven's late quartets with the cacophony of Parisian traffic and high tragedy with comic farce, Carmen becomes at once a parody of the director's own work from the 1960s and a prototype for a new cinema for its own time.

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