Jean-Luc Godard returns with a bracing, beautiful and confrontational essay film.
Splicing together classic film clips and newsreel footage, often stretched, saturated and distorted almost beyond recognition, The Image Book interrogates our relationship with film, culture and global politics.
In line with the rest of Godard's late-period oeuvre, The Image Book is composed of a series of films, paintings and pieces of music tied together with narration and additional original footage by Godard and Anne-Marie Miéville.
Similar to his earlier series Histoire(s) du cinéma (and sometimes using some of the exact same film quotes), the film examines the history of cinema and its inability to recognise the atrocities of the 20th and 21st centuries (specifically the Holocaust, ISIS and the Israeli–Palestinian conflict), the responsibilities of the filmmaker and the advances in political discourse with the introduction of consumer-grade digital cameras and iPhones.
Read about this film
Title: The Image Book | Le livre d'image (2018)
Directed by: Jean-Luc Godard
Date of birth: 3 December 1930, Paris, France
Writing credits:
Jean-Luc Godard
Country: Switzerland | France
Language: French
Color: Color
Runtime: 85 min.