Nouvelle Vague
- 2025
- Tous publics
- 1h 46m
The behind the scenes of the filming of Jean-Luc Godard's À bout de souffle (1960), a landmark of the French New Wave film movement.The behind the scenes of the filming of Jean-Luc Godard's À bout de souffle (1960), a landmark of the French New Wave film movement.The behind the scenes of the filming of Jean-Luc Godard's À bout de souffle (1960), a landmark of the French New Wave film movement.
- Awards
- 4 wins & 16 nominations total
Jodie Ruth-Forest
- Suzanne Schiffman
- (as Jodie Ruth Forest)
Paolo Luka-Noé
- François Moreuil
- (as Paolo Luka-Noe)
Alix Bénézech
- Juliette Greco
- (as Alix Benezech)
Featured reviews
I was bouncing back and forth between a 3.5/5 or a 4/5. I think I'd lean toward the latter if I had to pick, but on a 10-point scale, maybe a 7.5/10. Nouvelle Vague seems all very simple, and feels effortless, but then the craft here feels meticulous. It puts a lot of work into feeling loose and spontaneous, which is fitting when it's about such a loose and spontaneous movie. Nouvelle Vague tricks you into thinking Linklater and co. Are winging it, but this would've been tremendously difficult to make so authentically. All the recreated locations and the way it was shot... all perfect, like they went back in time to film this in 1960. The casting here is immense, and I particularly really forgot it was an actor playing Godard after a couple of scenes. The frame Aubry Dullin appears, I was shocked it wasn't actually Belmondo, because the appearance is uncanny. And then Belmondo is actually embodied beyond the physical resemblance, and I think the same mostly went for Zoey Deutch as Jean Seberg.
The casting and acting for the three leads were remarkable, and I was somewhat familiar with a few of the other side players (definitely not all, and I think you'd have to be super familiar with the French New Wave to know them all), but the casting was on point there, too. If 2026 is the first year they give out a Best Casting award at the Oscars, Nouvelle Vague is a shoo-in nomination.
Narratively and thematically, it isn't much more than a homage, or an excuse for Richard Linklater to show his appreciation for Godard, Breathless, and the French New Wave, but I enjoyed the craft here enough so that it was more than just charming. It shines on a technical front while also being pretty entertaining. I would've loved more time spent on the post-production of Breathless, and maybe a few scenes showing more of its release and the aftermath, but then again, Nouvelle Vague finishing a little abruptly (and with Godard still kind of being a jerk, albeit a jerk who'd proven he *probably* knew what he was doing) feels very New Wave, so maybe that potential weakness is actually a strength.
But Linklater's still got it. He is just pumping out constant good (and sometimes great) movies, like one every year or two. He's a bit underappreciated, really.
The casting and acting for the three leads were remarkable, and I was somewhat familiar with a few of the other side players (definitely not all, and I think you'd have to be super familiar with the French New Wave to know them all), but the casting was on point there, too. If 2026 is the first year they give out a Best Casting award at the Oscars, Nouvelle Vague is a shoo-in nomination.
Narratively and thematically, it isn't much more than a homage, or an excuse for Richard Linklater to show his appreciation for Godard, Breathless, and the French New Wave, but I enjoyed the craft here enough so that it was more than just charming. It shines on a technical front while also being pretty entertaining. I would've loved more time spent on the post-production of Breathless, and maybe a few scenes showing more of its release and the aftermath, but then again, Nouvelle Vague finishing a little abruptly (and with Godard still kind of being a jerk, albeit a jerk who'd proven he *probably* knew what he was doing) feels very New Wave, so maybe that potential weakness is actually a strength.
But Linklater's still got it. He is just pumping out constant good (and sometimes great) movies, like one every year or two. He's a bit underappreciated, really.
This monochromatic 2025 period piece is a cinephile's wet dream of a film from an obvious cineaste, but there's enough energy and craftsmanship here to attract the more casual viewer. A true renaissance man, director Richard Linklater just released "Blue Moon", his evocative WWII-era valentine to the creative titans of Broadway. With this film, he showcases his in-depth knowledge of the mid-century French New Wave movement, in particular, the making of Jean-Luc Godard's seminal debut, 1960's "Breathless" ("A Bout de Soufflé"). The film features relatively unknown actors portraying legendary cinema figures such as Roberto Rossellini, Francois Truffaut, and Jean-Pierre Melville. At the center of the screenplay by Holly Gent and Vince Palmo is Godard, a film critic determined to become a filmmaker. As effectively portrayed by Guillaume Marbeck, Godard is an arrogant disruptor who recruits two young actors, Jean-Paul Belmondo and Jean Seberg, to star as a boastful petty criminal and the American student who is smitten with him. Aubry Dillon is a dead ringer for the charismatic Belmondo, while Zoey Deutch in an accurate pixie cut captures Seberg's fierce reticence during the production. If you've not seen "Breathless", you might have trouble tracking the story being told, but that confusion was part of the appeal of the original movie. Linklater knows that and runs with it in this stylish homage.
From the very first moments of Nouvelle Vague, I found myself grinning uncontrollably - even giggling out of sheer excitement. It's been years since a movie made me feel this alive, this inspired. Richard Linklater's film doesn't just pay homage to the French New Wave - it somehow becomes it.
The illusion is extraordinary. Every frame looks and feels as if it were shot in 1959, unearthed decades later from a film archive no one knew existed. The grain, the lighting, the movement of the camera - all of it feels so authentic that it plays tricks on your mind. You start to forget you're watching a modern film. I have no idea what combination of lenses, filters, or post-production alchemy was used to achieve this effect, but the result is breathtaking. It's as if Linklater and his team managed to fold time itself back into celluloid.
The sound design and editing are equally meticulous. The ambient hiss, the slightly imperfect cuts, even the rhythm of the dialogue - everything contributes to the illusion of watching something real from another era. And yet, despite all that stylistic precision, the film feels effortless, full of spontaneity and warmth.
The cast is simply perfect. Each actor inhabits their role with such natural grace that you believe these are real people caught in the birth of a cinematic revolution. They don't parody Godard or Truffaut; they channel the restless curiosity and romanticism that defined that generation of filmmakers.
What surprised me most is how emotional it all felt. Beneath the technical mastery, there's genuine affection - not just for the aesthetics of the French New Wave, but for the creative spirit behind it: that fearless desire to experiment, to risk failure in pursuit of something true.
I haven't seen Godard's Breathless in years, but now I can't wait to revisit it. Nouvelle Vague rekindled that same hunger - the need to rediscover where modern cinema came from, and why it still matters.
When the credits rolled, I just sat there, buzzing with energy. I wanted to pick up a camera and go shoot a movie, make something! That's the best compliment I can give a film: it doesn't end when the screen goes dark - it sends you back into the world wanting to create.
I'm already planning to see it again on the big screen. This might honestly be my favorite Richard Linklater film - a love letter to cinema so convincing, so joyful, that it feels like it's been waiting sixty years just to inspire us all over again.
The illusion is extraordinary. Every frame looks and feels as if it were shot in 1959, unearthed decades later from a film archive no one knew existed. The grain, the lighting, the movement of the camera - all of it feels so authentic that it plays tricks on your mind. You start to forget you're watching a modern film. I have no idea what combination of lenses, filters, or post-production alchemy was used to achieve this effect, but the result is breathtaking. It's as if Linklater and his team managed to fold time itself back into celluloid.
The sound design and editing are equally meticulous. The ambient hiss, the slightly imperfect cuts, even the rhythm of the dialogue - everything contributes to the illusion of watching something real from another era. And yet, despite all that stylistic precision, the film feels effortless, full of spontaneity and warmth.
The cast is simply perfect. Each actor inhabits their role with such natural grace that you believe these are real people caught in the birth of a cinematic revolution. They don't parody Godard or Truffaut; they channel the restless curiosity and romanticism that defined that generation of filmmakers.
What surprised me most is how emotional it all felt. Beneath the technical mastery, there's genuine affection - not just for the aesthetics of the French New Wave, but for the creative spirit behind it: that fearless desire to experiment, to risk failure in pursuit of something true.
I haven't seen Godard's Breathless in years, but now I can't wait to revisit it. Nouvelle Vague rekindled that same hunger - the need to rediscover where modern cinema came from, and why it still matters.
When the credits rolled, I just sat there, buzzing with energy. I wanted to pick up a camera and go shoot a movie, make something! That's the best compliment I can give a film: it doesn't end when the screen goes dark - it sends you back into the world wanting to create.
I'm already planning to see it again on the big screen. This might honestly be my favorite Richard Linklater film - a love letter to cinema so convincing, so joyful, that it feels like it's been waiting sixty years just to inspire us all over again.
As "Nouvelle Vague" (2025 release from France; 106 min.) opens, Jean-Luc Godard, Francois Truffaut and Claude Chabrol are watching a movie in a theater. Afterwards they meet up with friends somewhere. It turns out that Godard is the only one of the three still to direct his first movie, but he claims that he is ready to do so. At this point we are 10 minutes into the movie...
Couple of comments: this is the latest from director Richard Linklater ("Boyhood", "Everybody Wants Some!!"). Here he goes to France to recreate how Godard filmed his 1960 debut film "Breathless", and Linklater does so by using the New Wave style of filming that came in vogue 65 years ago. The idea is as simple as it is brilliant. The devil is of course in the details, and that is where the production team really shines. I couldn't stop marveling at how authentic Paris circa 1959-1960 looks. Check out the countless vintage cars! Oh, and did I mention that the film is in glorious B&W, and with a screen ratio of 4:3? Just like "Breathless" itself. The acting performances are stellar throughout, including Guillaume Marbeck as Godard and Aubry Dullin as Belmondo. But the highest praise belongs to Zoey Deutch, playing Jean Seberg, the American actress based in Paris. Deutch captures it perfectly. They act out a number of pivotal scenes of "Breathless" but always showing it as someone observing it, not in it. If it sounds like I'm gushing about "Nouvelle Vague", well it's because I am!
"Nouvelle Vague" premiered at this year's Cannes Film Festival to immediate and wide critical acclaim. The Cannes screening caused a bidding war for the movie's distribution rights (ultimately won by Netflix). The movie is currently rated 90% Certified Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes, and it's easy to see why. "Nouvelle Vage" started streaming on Netflix this weekend, and I couldn't wait to see it. If you are a fan of Richard Linklater's or Zoey Deutch's earlier work, or simply a fan of French movies from the early 1960's, I'd readily suggest you check this out and draw your own conclusion. You won't regret it!
Couple of comments: this is the latest from director Richard Linklater ("Boyhood", "Everybody Wants Some!!"). Here he goes to France to recreate how Godard filmed his 1960 debut film "Breathless", and Linklater does so by using the New Wave style of filming that came in vogue 65 years ago. The idea is as simple as it is brilliant. The devil is of course in the details, and that is where the production team really shines. I couldn't stop marveling at how authentic Paris circa 1959-1960 looks. Check out the countless vintage cars! Oh, and did I mention that the film is in glorious B&W, and with a screen ratio of 4:3? Just like "Breathless" itself. The acting performances are stellar throughout, including Guillaume Marbeck as Godard and Aubry Dullin as Belmondo. But the highest praise belongs to Zoey Deutch, playing Jean Seberg, the American actress based in Paris. Deutch captures it perfectly. They act out a number of pivotal scenes of "Breathless" but always showing it as someone observing it, not in it. If it sounds like I'm gushing about "Nouvelle Vague", well it's because I am!
"Nouvelle Vague" premiered at this year's Cannes Film Festival to immediate and wide critical acclaim. The Cannes screening caused a bidding war for the movie's distribution rights (ultimately won by Netflix). The movie is currently rated 90% Certified Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes, and it's easy to see why. "Nouvelle Vage" started streaming on Netflix this weekend, and I couldn't wait to see it. If you are a fan of Richard Linklater's or Zoey Deutch's earlier work, or simply a fan of French movies from the early 1960's, I'd readily suggest you check this out and draw your own conclusion. You won't regret it!
Nouvelle Vague (2025) is a comedy drama movie directed by Richard Linklater and it follows the shooting of Breathless, one of the first feature movies of the Nouvelle Vague era of French cinema, in 1959. I just got done watching this movie on Netflix and it was fantastic.
Positives for Nouvelle Vague (2025): It was awesome to watch a movie about the making of a French movie from 1959. The black-and-white cinematography gives this movie that old school filmmaking style that I love about old cinema. The acting from the cast is fantastic and their dialogue is equally great. The pacing of the movie is great and I was able to mostly keep up with the story. The movie has amazing production value with the sets and costumes. And finally, this is one of those movies that was made for fans of older movies from the early 1900s.
Negatives for Nouvelle Vague (2025): My only issue is the language barrier as I don't speak French and it made it hard for me to keep up with the movie at times.
Overall, Nouvelle Vague (2025) is a fantastic movie from Richard Linklater who still has one of the most consistent filmography of any filmmaker and that makes me happy.
Positives for Nouvelle Vague (2025): It was awesome to watch a movie about the making of a French movie from 1959. The black-and-white cinematography gives this movie that old school filmmaking style that I love about old cinema. The acting from the cast is fantastic and their dialogue is equally great. The pacing of the movie is great and I was able to mostly keep up with the story. The movie has amazing production value with the sets and costumes. And finally, this is one of those movies that was made for fans of older movies from the early 1900s.
Negatives for Nouvelle Vague (2025): My only issue is the language barrier as I don't speak French and it made it hard for me to keep up with the movie at times.
Overall, Nouvelle Vague (2025) is a fantastic movie from Richard Linklater who still has one of the most consistent filmography of any filmmaker and that makes me happy.
Did you know
- TriviaNetflix acquired the rights to release it in the United States for $4 million, a record domestic outlay for a French-language film.
- GoofsIn a outdoor scene roughly halfway through, an Alfa Romeo Spider can be seen driving past. The Spider was introduced in 1966, six years after "Breathless" was filmed.
- Quotes
Jean-Luc Godard: We control our thoughts, which mean nothing. Not our emotions, which mean everything.
- Crazy creditsThe Netflix logo is black and white.
- SoundtracksTout l'Amour
(Passion Flower)
Written by Perry Botkin Jr., Pat Murtagh and Gil Garfield
French lyrics by Guy Bertret and André Salvet
Performed by Darío Moreno
2025 TIFF Festival Guide
2025 TIFF Festival Guide
See the current lineup for the 50th Toronto International Film Festival this September.
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- New Wave
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $1,046,648
- Runtime
- 1h 46m(106 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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