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The idea of film is very clear. A man and a married woman met by chance and fell in love. After a period of time, they met each other again. Unfortunately, she was hand-in-hand with a man. The former husband shattered everything. After that the story turn into a different branch. Shall it be really interesting?
3 December 1930, Paris, France
27 August 1980, Montreuil, France
20 April 1889, Braunau am Inn, Upper Austria, Austria-Hungary [now Austria]
March 10, 2017
A particularly painful scene featuring a loud scratchy quill on loud scratchy parchment made my hair and teeth feel very very loose. I think that's what J.L.G wanted, though.January 29, 2015
A film that's stuffed with language, its title notwithstanding.January 22, 2015
Anyone interested in the possibilities of the moviegoing experience - what can happen in a dark theater - owes it to themselves to say hello to "Goodbye to Language."March 19, 2015
I'm attaching four stars more out of helplessness than critical acumen, by the way; if the film is beyond language, it's certainly beyond a traditional rating system.January 16, 2015
At 84, Godard is still looking for new ways to express himself, though he thinks it harder than ever to achieve meaningful interpersonal communication in the information age.April 06, 2016
The film offers a resounding experience for anyone remotely interested in the way we watch movies.October 08, 2015
Working in 3-D for the first time, Mr. Godard pushes the envelope and - depending how you look at it - trolls the format for all its worth.May 19, 2016
The 3-D aside, there is nothing in "Language" that has not been done before and done better.June 06, 2016
Language is gone. The new cinema has arrived.May 12, 2015
A hugely entertaining and almost entirely inscrutable lark, with a punk rock air of both surrender and rejuvenation.March 19, 2015
Throughout this enigmatic film's short running time, I couldn't for the life of me make out what Godard was trying to say.January 16, 2015
Jean-Luc Godard is the acknowledged mascot, if not master, of intellectual cinema. In "Goodbye to Language 3D" the 84-year-old auteur... reprises his longstanding suspicion that words are worthless.