Agnès Varda’s Visits the Criterion Collection

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Agnès Varda’s Visits the Criterion Collection

Posted October 4, 2017 06:05 PM by Webmaster

The folks at Criterion have sent us a brand new video showing the Queen of the French New Wave, Agnès Varda, picking up some of her favorite films from the now rather famous DVD/Blu-ray closet.

Mrs. Varda's picks include: Jane Campion's An Angel at My Table and Sweetie, Abbas Kiarostami's Taste of Cherry, Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne's La Promesse, Jean-Luc Godard's Band of Outsiders, Lena Dunham's Tiny Furniture, and Rainer Werner Fassbinder's The BRD Trilogy.

ABOUT AGNES VARDA:

The only female director of the French New Wave, Agnès Varda has been called both the movement's mother and its grandmother. The fact that some have felt the need to assign her a specifically feminine role, and the confusion over how to characterize that role, speak to just how unique her place in this hallowed cinematic movement—defined by such decidedly masculine artists as Jean-Luc Godard and François Truffaut—is. Varda not only made films during the nouvelle vague, she helped inspire it. Her self-funded debut, the fiction-documentary hybrid 1956's La Pointe Courte is often considered the unofficial first New Wave film; when she made it, she had no professional cinema training (her early work included painting, sculpting, and photojournalism). Though not widely seen, the film got her commissions to make several documentaries in the late fifties. In 1962, she released the seminal nouvelle vague film Cléo from 5 to 7; a bold character study that avoids psychologizing, it announced her official arrival. Over the coming decades, Varda became a force in art cinema, conceiving many of her films as political and feminist statements, and using a radical objectivity to create her unforgettable characters. She describes her style as cinécriture (writing on film), and it can be seen in formally audacious fictions like Le bonheur and Vagabond as well as more ragged and revealing autobiographical documentaries like The Gleaners and I and The Beaches of Agnès. (Text provided by the Criterion Collection).