TPLAB xin kính chào Quý Khách. Chúc Quý Khách có một ngày thật vui vẻ và tràn đầy hạnh phúc.

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In the pantheon of French New Wave cinema, Jean-Luc Godard’s La Chinoise (1967) occupies a singular, volatile space: a film that is less a narrative and more a manifesto. Often subtitled “ou plutôt à la chinoise” (or rather, a Chinese film), the movie is a claustrophobic, brilliantly colored explosion of Maoist theory, student radicalism, and pop art aesthetics. To study the script of La Chinoise —published as La Chinoise: A Film by Jean-Luc Godard —is not to read a traditional screenplay, but to hold a blueprint for a political seminar, a revolutionary pamphlet, and a work of conceptual art. A Script of Interruption Unlike conventional scripts that prioritize dialogue, action lines, and scene transitions, Godard’s script for La Chinoise is built on the principle of interruption . The text reflects the film’s primary setting: an apartment in the 16th arrondissement of Paris, transformed into the cell of a nascent revolutionary group called “The Marxist-Leninist Youth.”

The script reads like a fragmented textbook. It is punctuated by bold-faced quotes from Lenin, Mao Zedong

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