Banda Aparte Instant
: A Los Angeles-based outfit known for their consumerist critiques and moody sound.
Bande à part reminds us that the best parts of life (and art) are often the detours—the "sidebars" where we stop to dance or run through a museum just because we can. "Band Aparte" also refers to:
There is "cool," and then there is Jean-Luc Godard in 1964 "cool". Banda aparte
If you’ve ever seen a slow-motion dance scene in a hipster indie film or watched characters break into a spontaneous, choreographed routine in a café, you’ve seen the DNA of Bande à part (released in English as Band of Outsiders ). It’s the film that inspired Quentin Tarantino to name his production company and gave the band Nouvelle Vague its name.
Before the characters in The Dreamers tried it, Arthur, Franz, and Odile set the world record for running through the Louvre Museum—clocked at exactly 9 minutes and 43 seconds. It’s the ultimate middle finger to high-brow tradition, turning a temple of art into a playground. : A Los Angeles-based outfit known for their
In the middle of planning a robbery, the three main characters—Arthur, Franz, and Odile—decide to take a break in a Parisian café. They don’t talk. They don't fight. They just perform a synchronized line dance called the Madison. Godard famously cuts the music in and out so you can hear the characters' internal thoughts. It’s a scene about nothing that became everything in cinema history.
Critically described by Pauline Kael as a "reverie of a gangster movie," Bande à part isn't really about the crime. It’s about the feeling of being young, bored, and obsessed with American B-movies. It deconstructs the genre while paying a loving, messy homage to it. If you’ve ever seen a slow-motion dance scene
But what makes a sixty-year-old black-and-white heist movie about two restless guys and a girl still feel like a fresh breeze?