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Cleo Film Techniques

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Furthermore, many essential concepts and characteristic techniques of the New Wave can be found in Cleo From 5 To 7 by Agnes Varda. French New Wave was spearheaded by the people who wanted more realistic representation of lives in the films. The story took place in the 2 hours when Cleo, a pop singer, decides to retrieve some test result from the hospital. As Peter Graham pointed out, the whole film was shot in “real time” (Graham, 578).The camera follows her in the crowd on the busy streets, and the audience know exactly how she get from a place to another since they witness her taking a taxi, riding in a friend’s car and later a bus. Time and space were so precisely captured in the film that viewers can draw out Cleo’s route on a map of Paris. Traditional films, on the contrary, often skip both in time and space(Smith,757). Jump cuts were commonly used in New Wave films to give a sense of jumping forward in time. However, in this film, jump cuts were used to express an unstable status of mind and a splintering sense of self as Cleo flied down the stairs …show more content…
Just like the way how Italian Neorealism influenced French New Wave with its on location shooting and frequent use of non-professional actors, other film movements are also able to absorb techniques and ideas from French New Wave and incorporated them to create a whole new film experience for the audience. The New Hollywood and American New Wave borrow narrative and editing techniques from French New Wave to further complicate the films. French New Wave, even though it is not technically new anymore, will continue to inspire generations of the filmmakers. Maybe one day, ironically, the New Wave will eventually become the mainstream tradition than young filmmakers try to break away

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