Art can't hold back the world's horrors in Jean-Luc Godard's grave and quizzical fugue
For Ever Mozart (1996)
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Reviews Counted:8
Fresh:5
Rotten:3
Average Rating:6.2/10
Runtime: 85 mins
Genre: Foreign Films
Synopsis: Acclaimed French director Jean-Luc Godard continues to develop his strikingly original cinematic language with FOR EVER MOZART. The film is more an abstract collection of scenes that merge on an... Acclaimed French director Jean-Luc Godard continues to develop his strikingly original cinematic language with FOR EVER MOZART. The film is more an abstract collection of scenes that merge on an extremely loose level than it is a typical narrative (for followers of Godard, this should come as no surprise). The story concerns an aging movie director who attempts to film a new production of a Musset play in besieged Sarajevo. Along the way, various strange things happen to him and his stars, including landing in an apocalyptic rural landscape (ala the director's 1967 masterwork WEEKEND). As usual, Godard peppers his film with cultural references--literate and historical--including nods to William Shakespeare, Albert Camus, and John Ford. Adding even more spark to the proceedings is Godard's now-trademark use of fractured editing, as well as his blunt musical transitions (featuring the works of David Darling, Ketil Bjornstad, Jon Christensen, Ben Harper, and Gyorgi Kurtag). Proving that his distinct vision only continues to grow as he edges toward his fortieth year as a film director, Godard's FOR EVER MOZART is another challenging, intellectual cinematic discourse from one of the French New Wave's most notable luminaries. [More]
Starring: Madeleine Assas, Frederic Pierrot
Starring: Madeleine Assas, Frederic Pierrot
Director: Jean-Luc Godard
Director: Jean-Luc Godard
Producer: Ruth Waldburger, Alain Sarde
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Reviews for For Ever Mozart
At times maddeningly obtuse and precipitously pretentious, at others remarkably moving and profound, this is, quite simply, a Godard film.
Random and uninspired, the film gets a few points for its looks, but nada for its plot.
If what you're expecting is an austere, lyrical essay that takes many tangents and requires serious deciphering, For Ever Mozart is a film to be savored.
This feature from veteran iconoclast Jean-Luc Godard is as dense and complex as the rest of his later films, but it's more focused, perhaps due to its subject matter.
The fact that he creates such a haphazard structure for them, and neglects to develop his character or devise much of a plot, suggests that Godard is more interested in talking to himself than to his audience.
Enormously difficult to follow and offers little guidance from its maker.
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| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
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