2. Biography
• Born 1928 in Brussels
• Studied photography and
art history at Ecole du
Louvre
• Worked as photographer
for Théâtre National
Populaire
• Currently installation artist
and photographer as well
as filmmaker Image source: Senses of Cinema
3. “Mother” of the French
New Wave
• La Pointe Courte (1954)
• Made by Varda’s own
production company, Ciné‐
Tamaris, without Varda
undergoing apprenticeship and
credentialing process dictated
by French film industry
• Narrative structure from
Faulkner’s The Wild Palms
• Focused on neighborhood in
city of Sète, in which she had
lived as teenager
• Viewed as precursor to French
New Wave films in blend of
documentary and fiction,
mixture of neorealist aesthetics
and high cultural artifacts, and
self‐reflexivity
Still from La Pointe Courte (1954).
Image source: Criterion Collection Database
4. Selected
Filmography
Documentary/Autobiography
• L'Opera‐Mouffe (1958)
• The Gleaners and I (2000)
Fiction
• Cléo de 5 à 7 (1961)
• Le Bonheur (1964)
• One Sings, The Other Doesn’t (1976)
• Vagabond (1985)
• Kung Fu Master (1987)
Experimental
• Lion’s Love (1969)
Varda working
across (and
integrating)
multiple cinematic
genres
5. Varda’s Cinécriture
• Literally “cinematic writing”
• Interest in filmic writing
placing Varda within Left Bank
group of filmmakers, but her
vision distinct
• For Varda, cinécriture involves
composition of screenplay,
cast, location, camera position
and movement, editing
rhythm, and sound to create
specific meanings
Image source: Reverseblog
6. Varda on Cinécriture
“A well written film is also well filmed, the actors are
well chosen, so are the locations. The cutting, the
movement, the points‐of‐view, the rhythm of filming
and editing have been felt and considered in the way
a writer chooses the depth of meaning of sentences,
the type of words, number of adverbs, paragraphs,
asides, chapters which advance the story or break its
flow, etc. In writing it’s called style. In the cinema
style is cinécriture” (qtd. in Alison Smith, Agnès
Varda, 14).