Quentin Tarantino as soon as outlined the “hangout” movie as “films that you just hangout with the characters a lot that they really turn into your mates,” and he declared his buddy Richard Linklater its grasp.
Whereas a visitor on this week’s episode of the Filmmaker Toolkit podcast, we requested Linklater what he considered the subgenre Tarantino had tagged his movies with. “Possibly he obtained that from me,” chuckled Linklater. “I usually describe my very own movies as ‘Hey, ‘I’m going drop a digital camera on 1976 or wherever I’m, and simply sort of hang around.”
He continued: “It’s not inaccurate. That’s the tone, I need the viewer to really feel like they’re transported to a spot and that they’re collaborating indirectly, and that there’s a relation with the character.”
Linklater, like many cinephiles, has lengthy held a reverence for the French New Wave — that point when cinema felt younger, new, and stuffed with prospects. And the concept of transporting again to what it felt prefer to be in that second was one thing he discovered interesting. However to perform that, he needed to throw his reverence for that second in historical past, and the good filmmakers in it, out the window. In accordance with Linklater, that’s the place most interval movies fail.
“I’ve at all times simply rolled my eyes at most ‘vital’ historic movies,” mentioned Linklater. “They’re stepping out of a portray or a sculpture or one thing. I simply preserve coming again to the phrase self-important. And I’m like, ‘No, life’s by no means been like that,’ life is occurring throughout you. The best moments in historical past have been preceded by somebody simply having a sandwich.”
The director wished to ask the viewers to simply come “hang around whereas they have been making ‘Breathless,” which was solely potential if the angle of his digital camera, just like the characters, is oblivious to the actual fact it’s witnessing the making of what would turn into a groundbreaking movie that may change movie historical past and launch Jean-Luc Godard’s profession.
Specifically, Linklater wanted to knock his Godard (Guillaume Marbeck) off his pedestal, instructing his ensemble that their characters have been dismissive of the younger director. “‘This man is no person. He’s an obscure movie author. You possibly can’t even make your method by means of his writing for ‘Cahiers du Cinéma.’” And to these taking part in the “Breathless” crew he instructed, “‘He most likely doesn’t know what he’s doing, and the movie most likely gained’t work. However you’re her, and hey, you want a job, it’s solely 20 days, he has some charisma, and who is aware of, it may be good, Jean Seberg’s in it, and she or he’s recognized.’”
Linklater believes movies about historic figures can undergo from their star energy. He acknowledges and rattles off the good performances given by A-list stars in biopics however admits that for him, there’s at all times one thing distracting concerning the layering of icon on icon.
“I at all times keep in mind the sensation I obtained watching ‘Gandhi’ 42 years in the past now, and in the event you didn’t know London theater, you didn’t actually know who Ben Kingsley was. I used to be a child in Texas and I knew lots about Gandhi at the moment, and watching it simply going, ‘Oh, that’s Gandhi,’ as a result of I didn’t know who the actor was,’” mentioned Linklater. “ I heard Dustin Hoffman wished to play Gandhi. And he most likely would’ve been fairly good, however I used to be transported.”
It was that feeling the director wished for “Nouvelle Obscure.” Linklater was very aware of the cinephile viewers who can be drawn to his movie — individuals like himself who consider Godard, Jean-Paul Belmondo (Aubry Dullin), François Truffaut (Adrien Rouyard), and Claude Chabrol (Antoine Besson) as these iconic figures in cinema — which is why he believes his ensemble of fresh-faced French actors was a very powerful ingredient.

“There’s the bodily resemblance, however that’s the apparent half. The rather more vital half is their personalities and who they’re,” mentioned Linklater. “Aubry, who performs Belmondo, he had this mild, ethereal [quality], fast smile, glad — he struck me as Belmondo, like, ‘I don’t care a lot. I’m right here, however I’m floating by means of. I’m a boxer. I’ve obtained all these items, girls love me.’”
Linklater auditioned Belmondo’s real-life grandson, who he mentioned is an effective actor and would have been advantageous, however Dullin embodied the spirit and simply “felt proper.” Linklater mentioned it usually got here all the way down to what the actors felt like within the room throughout auditions, and he may actually inform he had caught lightning in a bottle when he obtained them within the room collectively.
“I keep in mind sitting down with the actors who would play Godard, Truffaut, and Suzanne Schiffman (Jodie Ruth-Forest). As soon as I had the fitting actors, we have been sitting there studying a scene, and I videotaped it and confirmed it to [my producer] and mentioned, ‘See how particular that is?’ And so they’re like, ‘Oh my God, I see what you’re speaking about. It’s them, it’s them!’ And I’m like, ‘Yeah, it’s them. That is what we’re going for.’ [You] simply really feel such as you’re there with them.”
To hear Richard Linklater’s full interview, subscribe to the Filmmaker Toolkit podcast on Apple, Spotify, or your favourite podcast platform.

