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Synopsis

Pravda was filmed in Czechoslovakia on 16mm. It’s one of the films Godard made with the Groupe Dziga Vertov – a Marxist film about the political situation after the ‘68 revolution. Basically, it is an hour’s worth of montage of very interesting documentary images with voice-over. One memorably Godardian moment is when a man is shown speaking Czech and the narrator doesn’t translate – he just says “If you don’t understand Czech, you better start learning”. —IMDb

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Groupe Dziga Vertov

The Dziga Vertov Group (French: Groupe Dziga Vertov) was formed in 1968 by politically active filmmakers including Jean-Luc Godard and Jean-Pierre Gorin. Their films are defined primarily for Brechtian forms, Marxist ideology, and a lack of personal authorship. The group, named after 1920s-‘30s Soviet filmmaker Dziga Vertov, was dissolved soon after the completion of 1972’s Letter to Jane.

They are generally credited with having made nine films: read more

  • 1968 Un Film comme les autres (A Film Like the Others) * 1969 British Sounds/See You At Mao * 1969 Pravda * 1969 Le Vent d’est (Wind from the East) * 1969 Luttes en Italie (Struggles in Italy), originally Lotte in Italia * 1970 Jusqu’à la victoire (Until Victory/Palestine Will Win) * 1971 Vladimir et Rosa (Vladimir and Rosa) * 1972 Tout va bien (Everything’s Fine) * 1972 Letter to Jane…
Original

Jean-Luc Godard

The lynchpin of the French New Wave, Jean-Luc Godard was arguably the most influential filmmaker of the postwar era. Beginning with his groundbreaking 1959 feature debut A Bout de Souffle, Godard revolutionized the motion picture form, freeing the medium from the shackles of its long-accepted cinematic language by rewriting the rules of narrative, continuity, sound, and camera work. Later in his career, he also challenged the common means of feature production, distribution, and exhibition, all in an effort to subvert the conventions of the Hollywood formula to create a new kind of film.

Godard was born in Paris on December 3, 1930, the second of four children. After receiving his primary education in Nyon, Switzerland – during World War II, he became a naturalized Swiss citizen – he studied ethnology at the Sorbonne, but spent the vast majority of his days at the Cine-Club du Quartier Latin, where he first met fellow film fanatics Francois Truffaut and Jacques Rivette. In May… read more

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Little "Pravda" but more Godard than apparent

By BrianIn​Atlanta on February 14, 2011

“Pravda” is first, of course, a tool of propaganda and deliberately designed as such but its aims become more clear in the context of the rest of Godard’s films of the period. All of them are, in some…  read review

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