Contempt: Pocket Movie Guide

by Robinson, Jeremy Mark
ISBN: 9781861712424
Availability:
null

Available Offers


Pickup at {0} Out of stock at {0} Check other stores
FREE
Ship to Me
$3.99

Overview

CONTEMPT

JEAN-LUC GODARD

POCKET MOVIE GUIDE

By Jeremy Mark Robinson

There's no one else quite like Jean-Luc Godard, one of the most significant and inspiring filmmakers of recent times. Where the flood of movies globally now runs into many thousands, Godard's works stand out as original, acerbic, romantic, ironic, controversial, humorous and explorative.

Le Mépris (a.k.a. Contempt, a.k.a., A Ghost At Noon, 1963) was one of Jean-Luc Godard's films about films, in particular the contemporary, Hollywood film industry.

Contempt was an international production: it was filmed in French (with parts in English, Italian and German), set (and filmed) in Italy, produced by an Italian (Carlo Ponti), a Frenchman (Georges de Beauregard) and an American (Joe Levine), based on a novel by an Italian writer (Alberto Moravia's Il Disprezzo [A Ghost At Noon]), and starred an American (Jack Palance, as U.S. film producer Jerry Prokosch), a German (Fritz Lang, as himself, a German filmmaker in exile, 72 at the time of making Contempt), and two French actors (Brigitte Bardot as Camille Javal a 28 year-old French typist and Michel Piccoli as her husband Paul Javal, a playwright). Camille Javal is Bardot's real name.

Contempt is also a movie about movies, a movie about art, and communication, and exile, and Europe, and capitalism, and despair, and - of course - death. Contempt is a commentary upon the possibility of one day perhaps thinking about making a movie on subjects which might include love, marriage, betrayal, integrity, loyalty, desire and power.

Fully illustrated. Bibliography, filmography, Godardisms and notes.

  • Format: Trade Paperback
  • Author: Robinson, Jeremy Mark
  • ISBN: 9781861712424
  • Condition: New
  • Dimensions: 8.00 x 0.64
  • Number Of Pages: 304
  • Publication Year: 2025
Language: English