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Scheffler opens with bogeys while McIlroy pars at windy US Open
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Brazil turn corner but tougher World Cup tests await
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Ronaldinho coming out of retirement to join Italian 3rd division side
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Cerundolo sees off Nakashima to set up Queen's final with Paul
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Real Madrid say no contact with Bayern's Olise
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Fritz takes down Zverev again to reach Halle final
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Heartbreak for Japanese ace Satono Reve as Almeraq wins Royal Ascot thriller
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Hendy quick-fire double sweeps Northampton to Prem title
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Injured Doris out of Ireland's Nations Championship squad
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'Not ridiculous': US dreams of World Cup glory after big wins
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Kolbe star goal kicker as Springboks put 80 past Barbarians
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Pogacar pips Van der Poel to Swiss Tour TT win
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Bolivia declares state of emergency and begins removing protester roadblocks
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Ukraine's Zelensky, top officials return Polish awards in WWII row
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Cerundolo sees off Nakashima to reach Queen's final
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Jamieson double rocks England at start of record run-chase
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Pegula powers past Sabalenka to reach Berlin final
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Funeral for art giant David Hockney already taken place: publicist
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Krishna and Jaiswal power India to ODI sweep against Afghanistan
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Red heat alert issued for third of France, alcohol banned at music festival
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Bagnaia scorches to Czech MotoGP sprint victory, Bezzecchi crashes
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Trump escalates spat with Italy’s Meloni over G7 photo claim
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New Zealand set England record 463 to win second Test
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Driver killed, 28 in hospital as UK train collision probed
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Diplomats hold US-Iran preparatory discussions at Swiss retreat
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New Zealand pile on the runs to leave England facing record chase in 2nd Test
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Shahidi hits ton but India bowl out Afghanistan for 218
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Court bans Spanish PM's wife from leaving country
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Israel strikes south Lebanon despite truce announced with Hezbollah
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Japan's Ogura smashes own track record to take Czech MotoGP pole
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Hurricanes blow away Chiefs in record-breaking Super Rugby final
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Germany meet Ivory Coast in high-stakes World Cup clash, Sweden face Dutch
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Ancient Greek theatre revives legendary Callas opera Medea
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Indian guru urges broader view of yoga
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Portugal's unofficial exorcism fever worries Church
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Paraguay's Almiron sent off under new FIFA 'mouth-covering' rule
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Ancelotti hails 'complete game' as Brazil sink Haiti at World Cup
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Tunisia ask how Sweden World Cup star Ayari slipped its net
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Scotland remain bullish despite Morocco World Cup setback
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USA down Australia to reach World Cup knockout rounds, Brazil swat Haiti
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Brazil cruise past Haiti to re-ignite World Cup campaign
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Australia detects first case of contagious H5 bird flu
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Scheffler career Slam chances blowing in Shinnecock winds
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Iran's treatment at World Cup 'a dark point' for football: official
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McIlroy seven back but likes his chances at US Open
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Nagelsmann eyes same German lineup against I. Coast after Curacao trouncing
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Clark leads US Open by four with major champs in the hunt
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Saibari early strike gives Morocco World Cup win over Scotland
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Archaeologists discover 'never before seen' pre-Hispanic ruins in Mexico
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Pochettino backs 'high IQ' players to block out World Cup hype
Godard, film rebel without a pause
Jean-Luc Godard -- who has died at 91 -- was the rebel spirit who drove the French New Wave, firing out a volley of films in the 1960s that rewrote the rules of cinema.
Between "Breathless" ("A Bout de Souffle") in 1960 and the student protests of 1968, Godard exhilarated audiences as he shook the film world with his technical innovations and savage, occasionally lyrical, satires.
Sometimes working on two movies at the same time, he ranged over crime, politics and prostitution in a burst of creative energy that would inspire two generations of directors.
Godard's witty aphorisms like "a story should have a beginning, a middle and an end -- but not necessarily in that order", became lodestars for filmmakers from Robert Altman and Martin Scorsese to Quentin Tarantino and Paul Thomas Anderson.
But the flame that had burned so bright in the 1960s veered off into revolutionary politics and Maoist obscurantism in the 1970s, and he came to be seen almost as a tragicomic figure.
Godard spent several years experimenting with video before returning to commercial filmmaking -- of a kind -- in 1979.
- Modern prophet -
But the freshness was gone and critics accused him of becoming too elliptical, with some branding his early films misogynist.
Yet the increasingly reclusive Godard persevered down his singular path, before reinventing himself in his later years as a gnomic cigar-chomping prophet.
He shot his critically acclaimed "Film Socialisme" on board the Costa Concordia cruise ship in 2009, declaring that capitalism was heading for the rocks. When the ship ran aground three years later, it wasn't just his small band of disciples who treated him as a visionary.
Born in Paris into a well-to-do Franco-Swiss family on December 3, 1930, Godard was lucky enough to spend World War II at Nyons in neutral Switzerland, returning to the French capital in 1949 to study ethnology at the Sorbonne.
But his real education was in the little cinemas of the Latin Quarter where he first ran into Francois Truffaut, Jacques Rivette and Eric Rohmer, all future luminaries of the French cinema.
He fell in love with American action cinema and began writing criticism under the pseudonym "Hans Lucas" with Truffaut, Rivette and Rohmer for small magazines like the "Cahiers du Cinema", where they plotted to revolutionise the art.
After a failed attempt to make his first film in America, he went to work on a dam in Switzerland and saved enough money to make a film about it, "Operation Concrete" (1954).
It helped lay the foundation for his rapid ascent that would see him hailed as the leader of the French New Wave when "Breathless" was released in 1960.
- 'The Picasso of cinema' -
That swaggering story of a small-time crook on the run who romances a young American in Paris was a major landmark in French cinema, heralding the arrival of a generation of irreverent young film-makers determined to break with the past.
So big was its impact that Truffaut called Godard cinema's Picasso, someone who had "sown chaos... and made everything possible". As often with Godard, their friendship later turned sour, with Truffaut branding him a "shit" after the pair fell out in 1973.
By shooting on the fly in outdoor locations and improvising endlessly, Godard rewrote the rulebook and helped popularise the idea of the director as "auteur", the creative force behind everything on the screen.
"Breathless" also gave the first big break to Jean-Paul Belmondo, who would later star in Godard's masterpiece and most personal film "Pierrot le Fou" (1965), which explored the pain of his break-up with the Danish actress Anna Karina.
From the start, Godard's career was dogged by controversy. "Le Petit Soldat" (1960), with its references to the Algerian war, was banned by the French authorities for three years and "Une Femme Mariee" (A married woman, 1964) had its title changed from "La Femme Mariee" by censors concerned that its adulterous heroine might be taken for the typical French wife.
But after "Weekend" (1967), a gory examination of the obsession with cars scattered with surrealistic traffic accidents, his work too often appeared self-indulgent.
Indeed, Godard became something of an intellectual oddity, emerging every few years from his bolthole in Rolle on the shores of Lake Geneva to lob a verbal grenade or two.
It was this tragic, cartoonish Godard on the slide who features in "Godard Mon Amour", the 2017 comedy about him by Michel Hazanavicius, the Oscar-winning maker of "The Artist".
But by then Godard was having the last laugh, with his reputation somewhat restored by a series of low-budget metaphorical films that questioned our image-saturated world.
"Film is over," he told The Guardian in a rare interview in 2011, recanting his oft-quoted maxim that "photography is truth, and the cinema is truth 24 times per second".
"With mobile phones, everyone is now an auteur," he said.
J.V.Jacinto--PC