Speaking hours before being awarded the Berlin
Film Festival's Berlinale Camera award for lifetime achievement,
Varda- director of "La Pointe Courte" (1955) and "Vagabond"
(1985) - dismissed attempts to lionise her.
"I'm not a legend, I'm still alive," she exclaimed after the
moderator at Wednesday's press conference introduced the
"legendary" figure, seen as a founder of the French New Wave,
one of the most influential movements in cinema history.
Her latest film shows her discussing her oeuvre before live
audiences, with extracts from earlier films like the feminist
classic Cleo from 5 to 7 spliced in. In between, she interviews
the actors and cinematographers she collaborated with.
"I'm very interested in other people," she said, "and in the
film you saw a lot of people who have been so important to me...
I have to prepare myself to say goodbye and go away."
The film also explores her later career as a visual artist,
examining a series of video installations now on display in New
York's Museum of Modern Art and the Cartier Foundation in Paris,
as well as a series of sheds she built using endless spools of
celluloids made redundant by the digital revolution.
A near-contemporary of giants of similar stature like Jean-Luc
Godard and Francois Truffaut, Varda's career continues to the
present day. Asked if "Agnes by Varda" was her final film, she
said she might not be able to work until the age of 102.
"But so far so good."
(Reporting by Thomas Escritt; Editing by Mark Heinrich)
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