"Histoire(s) du cinéma" Fatale beauté (TV Episode 1994)
Valehtelija (1981)
Movie scenes from this Movie can be seen hereThe Dreamers (2003)
Excerpts and Matthew, Theo, and Isabelle running through the Louvre is a recreation of a famous scene in that movieCinema Sex Politics: Bertolucci Makes 'the Dreamers' (TV Movie 2003)
Excerpt seen in a clip from 'The Dreamers'.Le fantôme d'Henri Langlois (2004)
archive footageGodard, l'amour, la poésie (2007)
Movie stills are shown.
Jean-Luc Godard in Helsinki (Short 1965)
Movie is mentioned by Jean-Luc Godard.Hour of the Wolf (1968)
In "Vargtimmen" Max von Sydow's character talks about how extremely long one minute can appear to be and demonstrates it by having an actual minute pass on screen while counting down on his watch. With this scene, Bergman references a scene in Jean-Luc Godard's "Bande a part" released four years earlier in which the characters have a minute of silence in the film.Godard in America (1970)
The narrator mentions Band of Outsiders in the introduction.Rio das Mortes (TV Movie 1971)
Valehtelija (1981)
Ville and his friend play on the lake-shore reconstructing the Bande à part scene in which Arthur and his uncle shoot each other (the same scene that was Featured earlier in the movie).
The Immigrant (Short 1917)
The scene where Odil is resting her head on Franz's shoulder at the end is an exact copy of the final scene in the Immigrant where Edna Purviance rests her head on Charlie Chaplin.The Gold Rush (1925)
Anna Karina references the dance with the roles by Charlie Chaplin with her hands before the dance sequence.Sergeants 3 (1962)
Paris cinema marquee features French TitleContempt (1963)
Sami Frey's character tells Anna Karina (who bears quite a resemblance to author Alberto Moravia's character Emille in his book CONTEMPT) that she looks like a girl in a book he has read and he will lend it to her so she may never betray him again. (An obvious part of the plot of both the book and Godard's adaptation of the book to screen).The Umbrellas of Cherbourg (1964)
"Documentary Now!" Trouver Frisson (TV Episode 2022)
The dance scene is parodied.
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