
Nothing but silence. Nothing but a revolutionary song.
Overview
In Le Livre d’Image, Jean-Luc Godard recycles existing images (films, documentaries, paintings, television archives, etc.), quotes excerpts from books, uses fragments of music. The driving force is poetic rhyme, the association or opposition of ideas, the aesthetic spark through editing, the keystone. The author performs the work of a sculptor. The hand, for this, is essential. He praises it at the start. “There are the five fingers. The five senses. The five parts of the world (…). The true condition of man is to think with his hands. Jean-Luc Godard composes a dazzling syncopation of sequences, the surge of which evokes the violence of the flows of our contemporary screens, taken to a level of incandescence rarely achieved. Crowned at Cannes, the last Godard is a shock film, with twilight beauty.
Cast
Jean-Luc Godard
Narrator (voice)
Anne-Marie Miéville
Narrator (voice)
Jean-Pierre Gos
Narrator (voice)
Buster Keaton
(archive footage)
Jean Gabin
(archive footage)
Douglas Fairbanks
(archive footage)
Jean Marais
(archive footage)
Jean Cocteau
(archive footage)
Wallace Beery
(archive footage)
Jules Berry
(archive footage)
Eddie Constantine
(archive footage)
Roberto Cobo
(archive footage)
Danielle Darrieux
(archive footage)
Josette Day
(archive footage)
Jacques Perconte
(archive footage)
Gaby Bruyère
(archive footage)
Jean Galland
(archive footage)
Dimitri Basil
(archive footage)
Goodbye to Language
War and Peace, Part I: Andrei Bolkonsky
Let It Rain
Love and Death
American Honey
La Jetée
First Reformed
Malcolm X
The Peanut Butter Falcon
Batman: The Killing Joke
On My Skin
The Dead Don't Die
Sicario
Bohemian Rhapsody
Inside Out
Joker
Pulp Fiction
Oppenheimer
Interstellar
Once Upon a Time... in Hollywood