A biography of the pioneering filmmaker.
Jean-Luc Godard's early films revolutionised the language of cinema for everyone, from the superbrats of Hollywood to the political cinema of the Third World. Yet in 1968 he abandoned one of the most brilliant careers in French cinema to pursue his investigations into sound and image on the periphery of the industry he had rejected.
Following a protected childhood in Switzerland in the Second World War, the postwar years saw Godard as a troubled adolescent in Paris, where the prescribed courses of the Sorbonne were ignored in favour of the extraordinary teaching of Andre Bazin, the greatest of film critics.
In the pages of Cahiers du Cinema, Godard - together with Truffaut, Rohmer, Rivette and Chabrol - hammered out an aesthetic that would take the world by storm as the young critics swapped pens for cameras at the end of the 1950s to create the cinema of the nouvelle vague.
Hugely prolific in his first ten years, Godard became and remains one of the most adventurous and enigmatic film-directors at work in the world today.