Tiffany Shlain Selects: The Beaches of Agnès

(Les plages d’Agnès)

  • Introduction

    UC Berkeley film graduate, Webby Awards founder, and filmmaker Tiffany Shlain has been named by Newsweek magazine as “one of the women shaping the 21st Century.”

Agnès Varda takes a cinematic stroll through her career—and the history of French film—in this jovial first-person documentary that “walks backwards” across the beaches, landscapes, and movie sets of her life and times. For some, turning eighty may mean settling down, but for the “Grandmother of the French New Wave” it was cause for reflection, irreverence, and a continued reinvention of the cinematic form. Recollections of a wartime childhood, an early career as a photographer, and her emergence as a filmmaker coincide with remembrances of friends and colleagues, a who’s-who that includes Jean-Luc Godard, Gérard Depardieu, Alexander Calder, Jim Morrison, and members of the Black Panthers; special attention is paid to fellow Left Bank filmmakers like good friend Chris Marker (who “appears” in his favorite feline guise) and Varda’s great love, Jacques Demy. As charming and idiosyncratic as Varda herself, The Beaches of Agnès was one of her last features, but it’s as youthful and vigorous as her first, 1955’s La Pointe Courte.

Jason Sanders
FILM DETAILS 
Screenwriter
  • Agnès Varda
Cinematographer
  • Alain Sakot
  • Hélène Louvart
  • Julia Fabry
  • Jean-Baptiste Morin
  • Agnès Varda
Language
  • French
  • with English subtitles
Print Info
  • Color
  • 35mm
  • 110 mins
Source
  • Cinema Guild