In his course, he meets Jean-Noël and Mathias, among others, who have also come to the metropolis from smaller towns and share his passion for cinema. Together they discuss film classics, read texts by Flaubert and Pasolini, listen to Bach and Mahler. Jean Paul Civeyrac, essential protagonist of the new 'Nouvelle Vague' sketches a tenderly melancholic black and white study of experiences with art and life. "Language, even in its dogmatism, is perhaps the true subject of the film: how it forms a world unto itself, a protective niche, a refuge that delays the inevitable (adulthood, compromise)." (LeMonde)
In his course, he meets Jean-Noël and Mathias, among others, who have also come to the metropolis from smaller towns and share his passion for cinema. Together they discuss film classics, read texts by Flaubert and Pasolini, listen to Bach and Mahler.
Jean Paul Civeyrac, essential protagonist of the new 'Nouvelle Vague' sketches a tenderly melancholic black and white study of experiences with art and life.
"Language, even in its dogmatism, is perhaps the true subject of the film: how it forms a world unto itself, a protective niche, a refuge that delays the inevitable (adulthood, compromise)." (LeMonde)