French New Wave director Jacques Rivette, who often explored the blurry line between reality and fantasy in a career spanning six decades and more than 20 features, died Friday at his home in Paris.
Jacques Rivette, who died today, at the age of eighty-seven, was both the most open and the most reticent of French filmmakers. Of his openness, I had the good fortune of personal experience—I ...
The French New Wave came into being when several young critics on the influential magazine Cahiers du Cinéma decided to take practical action in their battle against the more traditional films made by ...
With the death last week of Jacques Rivette, a certain idea of French cinema took one step closer to death. Along with François Truffaut, Jean-Luc Godard and Alain Resnais, Rivette was one of the ...
Rivette: he held a strange power over his friends, even Godard would change his opinion to agree with him (EPA) Critic-turned-director Jacques Rivette, pioneer of the French New Wave, was its least ...
DOGE Culture Fiasco, a Court Decision, and Rule by ChatGPT Protecting Humanness from AI A Hermit Gets Naked, Goes Wild. Plus, the Marvel Called the Thorne Rooms MAID Gone Mad in Canada Audio By ...
Two small experimental theatre troupes working on plays by Aeschylus and two puckish young eccentrics give rise to “Out 1: Noli Me Tangere,” Jacques Rivette’s feature film from 1971 that runs five ...
Jacques Rivette’s films are a celebration of women, light, Paris in summer - and the power of storytelling. David Thomson pays tribute to one of the greatest living directors In our strenuous yet ...
Jacques Rivette’s 1966 film, “La Religieuse (The Nun),” might be one of the greatest prison movies ever made and certainly one of the most controversial. The prison is a Catholic convent, and the ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. French New Wave director Jacques Rivette, who often explored the blurry line between reality and fantasy in a career spanning six ...
Jacques Rivette, the Cahiers du Cinema critic and director of “The Nun” (1966), “L’amour fou” (1969), “Celine and Julie Go Boating” (1974), Cannes Grand Prix winner “La belle noiseuse” (1991), and ...