Godard’s balls are so huge. Thinking economically, he essentially borrows his friend Truffaut’s character Antoine Doinel and sticks him in his own movie. (There’s even a little wink as Paul, as Jean-Pierre Leaud’s character is called here, refers to himself as “General Doinel” when trying to hijack a car from an army outpost.) This is an artist at the top of his game — zipping around Paris, babbling about love, poetry and workers’ rights. Godard’s early films are like sweet chunks of quasi-intellectual candy.
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Jordan Hoffman is a New York-based writer and film critic working for The Guardian, Vanity Fair, Thrillist, Times of Israel, NY Daily News and elsewhere.
He is the host of ENGAGE: The Official Star Trek Podcast, a member of the New York Film Critics Circle and challenges you to a game of backgammon.