<p>Stars and film buffs turned out on a rainy Sunday at Cannes to see the last film by Jean-Luc Godard, one of the most influential filmmakers of the 20th century.</p>.<p>Posthumous short film <em>Phony Wars</em> was presented alongside a new documentary about the Swiss director, who died last year aged 91 by assisted suicide.</p>.<p>US director Jim Jarmusch and actor Salma Hayek were among those at the screening, along with China's Wang Bing who has a documentary in this year's competition.</p>.<p>Godard's short film was a collage of images with text set to bursts of music -- characteristic of the director's beautiful but ever-more obscure late works.</p>.<p>The documentary, <em>Godard by Godard</em>, retraces the main chapters in Godard's long career, from his rule-breaking early movies <em>Breathless</em> and <em>Band of Outsiders</em> that have inspired generations of filmmakers, and shows his playful side at work and in interviews.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/bone-chilling-auschwitz-drama-is-early-cannes-favourite-1220496.html" target="_blank">'Bone-chilling' Auschwitz drama is early Cannes favourite</a></strong></p>.<p>There was spontaneous applause midway through when it showed Godard at Cannes in 1968, calling for the festival to be cancelled in solidarity with student protests.</p>.<p>There have been fears of unrest at this year's edition linked to President Emmanuel Macron's pension reforms, though there has been little disruption so far.</p>.<p>Godard's work "will continue to live in books, films, and find new audiences and young spectators," said Frederic Bonnaud, president of the French Cinematheque, who wrote the documentary's script.</p>.<p>Godard made a turn to politics in the 1970s, and then stopped making features completely for several years as he experimented with different styles and technologies.</p>.<p>When he returned to features in the 1980s and 1990s, his experimental style brought him both acclaim and derision.</p>.<p>One scene shows a member of the public throwing a cream cake in his face at Cannes in 1985.</p>
<p>Stars and film buffs turned out on a rainy Sunday at Cannes to see the last film by Jean-Luc Godard, one of the most influential filmmakers of the 20th century.</p>.<p>Posthumous short film <em>Phony Wars</em> was presented alongside a new documentary about the Swiss director, who died last year aged 91 by assisted suicide.</p>.<p>US director Jim Jarmusch and actor Salma Hayek were among those at the screening, along with China's Wang Bing who has a documentary in this year's competition.</p>.<p>Godard's short film was a collage of images with text set to bursts of music -- characteristic of the director's beautiful but ever-more obscure late works.</p>.<p>The documentary, <em>Godard by Godard</em>, retraces the main chapters in Godard's long career, from his rule-breaking early movies <em>Breathless</em> and <em>Band of Outsiders</em> that have inspired generations of filmmakers, and shows his playful side at work and in interviews.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/bone-chilling-auschwitz-drama-is-early-cannes-favourite-1220496.html" target="_blank">'Bone-chilling' Auschwitz drama is early Cannes favourite</a></strong></p>.<p>There was spontaneous applause midway through when it showed Godard at Cannes in 1968, calling for the festival to be cancelled in solidarity with student protests.</p>.<p>There have been fears of unrest at this year's edition linked to President Emmanuel Macron's pension reforms, though there has been little disruption so far.</p>.<p>Godard's work "will continue to live in books, films, and find new audiences and young spectators," said Frederic Bonnaud, president of the French Cinematheque, who wrote the documentary's script.</p>.<p>Godard made a turn to politics in the 1970s, and then stopped making features completely for several years as he experimented with different styles and technologies.</p>.<p>When he returned to features in the 1980s and 1990s, his experimental style brought him both acclaim and derision.</p>.<p>One scene shows a member of the public throwing a cream cake in his face at Cannes in 1985.</p>