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Jean-Luc Godard on Bob Dylan, 1988

a scene off Masculin, féminin (1966) by Jean-Luc Godard (3 December 1930 – 13 September 2022)…

«In 1971 I had a motorcycle accident, like Bob Dylan,. I consider him like an “equal,” a peer and someone with whom I considered myself to be in “correspondence”. I have a great deal of sympathy for him when I read critics who eviscerate him, who call him a “has-been.” Sometimes I read Rolling Stone to get news of him. I want to see whether he’s on the charts. I tried to get him to act in who-knows-what film, a project in the United States – and then all of a sudden he turned toward Christ and I said to myself, “That will happen to me too.” I forgot all about it, but when I made “Hail Mary,” I remembered: “Look, Dylan warned me.” The movie for which I wanted Dylan was “King Lear” – and told another journalist, “I’d have wanted Dylan, but the Americans are like kings, they’re untouchable, it’s as if I asked President Mitterrand to play a small role of a secretary because his face was right for the part, he might want to do it but he can’t.” Anyway, I did see Dylan’s film Renaldo and Clara – which he found sympathique» – Jean-Luc Godard on Bob Dylan, 1988

«I figured Godard had the accessibility to make what he made, he broke new ground. I never saw any film like “Breathless,” but once you saw it, you said: “Yeah, man, why didn’t I do that, I could have done that.” Okay, he did it, but he couldn’t have done it in America» – Bob Dylan on Jean-Luc Godard, 1985

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Written by ugur

Ugur is an editor and writer at Need Some Fun (NSF News), covering world news, history, archaeology, cultural heritage, science, entertainment, travel, animals, health, and games. He delivers well-researched and credible stories to inform and entertain readers worldwide. Contact: [email protected]