5.7
58 min
A famous French filmmaker is hired by a major Hollywood producer to make a documentary on the state of post-Cold War Russia. The filmmaker, though, subverts the project by stubbornly remaining in France and casting himself as the title character of Dostoyevsky's "The Idiot," offering up a series of typically Godardian musings on art, politics, the nature of images and the future of cinema.
Name | Character | Team | |
---|---|---|---|
László Szabó | Jack Valenti: The producer | Unowned | |
Jean-Luc Godard | The idiot: Prince Mishkin | Unowned | |
Bernard Eisenschitz | Harry Blount | Unowned | |
André S. Labarthe | Alcide Jolivet | Unowned | |
Bénédicte Loyen | Unowned | ||
Polina Kutepova | the maid, Chekhov's sister | Unowned | |
Kseniya Kutepova | the maid, Chekhov's sister | Unowned | |
Irina Apeksimova | Anna Karenina | Unowned |