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The Audiovisual Script
Institute of Contemporary Arts
Test footage filmed on the set of Francis Ford Coppola’s One from the Heart (1981), dir. Jean-Luc Godard, Switzerland 1981, 7 min

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From the late 1970s onwards Jean-Luc Godard began exploring alternatives to the conventional written film script in the form of paper-based collages and audiovisual ‘scripts’. The latter took the form of essayistic video notebooks designed, like preparatory studies or sketches for paintings, to chart the outline and contours of what the emerging film might look like through what he termed ‘the beginnings of images, embryos’.

His first planned audiovisual script was for a feature film he was developing for Francis Ford Coppola’s Zoetrope Studios on the life of the mafioso Bugsy Siegel, titled Bugsy or The Story. ‘Instead of writing a script’, as he put it in conversation with Peter Wollen and Donald Ranvaud in Jon Jost’s film Godard 1980, ‘we are shooting it. So afterwards, when I’m looking for a star to act in it and they say “Do you have a script?”, I reply “Yes, of course”, they say “May I read it?”, I reply “No, but you can see it”. … Instead of working with just a piece of paper and a pencil, it’s working with a camera, you try to find… Like a painter working with colour and pencils, you try to think in images and to use the words as segments of the images, or sometimes alone too, but not always at the beginning. … Like scientists, who don’t write the experiment before doing it. They do the experiment and then they write about it. Because you know what you have seen, whether it’s possible. You know if the actress is acting well or not because you’ve experimented. And it’s fun, more or less. It’s more fun.’

In the end neither the audiovisual script for Bugsy/The Story nor the film itself was made. Godard also abandoned plans to adapt Jack Kerouac’s On the Road for Zoetrope, a project for which he had also envisaged making a preparatory audiovisual script.

In 1979, he completed his first audiovisual script, which was for Sauve qui peut (la vie) (Every Man For Himself, 1980). This was followed by similar exploratory video notebooks for Passion (1982), Je vous salue, Marie (Hail Mary, 1985) and, much later (2005–6), his abandoned Collage(s) de France exhibition at the Pompidou Centre. In between, he harboured plans for audiovisual scripts for several further unmade projects, including for a film inspired by Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony and for his major late venture, Scénario (‘Script’). Moreover, his final completed films, including those finished posthumously by his long-term close collaborators, were all audiovisual scripts for unrealised virtual works.

This screening brings together a cluster of interrelated works around a film that many consider to be among Godard’s finest artistic achievements: Passion. These include rare early test footage for Passion that he directed in April 1981 on the set of Coppola’s One from the Heart, which included a cinematic reconstruction of Georges de La Tour’s painting The Newborn Child (c.1648). He used much of this material in his subsequent audiovisual script for Passion, titled Passion, le travail et l’amour: Introduction à un scénario (Passion, the work and the love: introduction to a script’), aka Troisième État du scénario de ‘Passion’ (‘Third state of the script for Passion’). Next comes the feature film Passion itself, followed by the somewhat confusingly titled self-reflective video essay he made about it afterwards, Scénario du film Passion (‘Script of the film Passion’), which combines elements of Passion, le travail et l’amour: Introduction à un scénario with footage from Passion and further material he recorded during and after the shoot. Finally, there is the stunning short film he made in 2006 using the La Tour footage, Une bonne à tout faire (‘A maid-of-all-work’), which he included in the final version of his Pompidou Centre exhibition, Voyage(s) en utopie, JLG, 1946–2006, À la recherche d’un théorème perdu (Travel(s) in utopia, JLG, 1946–2006, in search of a lost theorem).

Besides casting a light on Godard’s prolonged exploration of the possibilities of the audiovisual script, this constellation of material offers a unique insight into the genesis of Passion and the Godardian creative process generally.

This screening will be introduced by Michael Witt.

Programme
Test footage filmed on the set of Francis Ford Coppola’s One from the Heart (1981), dir. Jean-Luc Godard, Switzerland 1981, 7 min
Passion, le travail et l’amour: Introduction à un scénario (‘Passion, the work and the love: introduction to a script’), dir. Jean-Luc Godard, Switzerland 1981, 39 min
Passion, dir. Jean-Luc Godard, France/Switzerland 1982, 88 min
Scénario du film Passion (‘Script of the film Passion’), dir. Jean-Luc Godard, Switzerland 1982, 53 min
Une bonne à tout faire (‘A maid-of-all-work’), dir. Jean-Luc Godard, France/Switzerland 2006, 8 min
 
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Sun, 24 May 2026
Cinema 1
01:00 pm
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