Godard in a dim room with a videocamera on him and a monitor, so he appears twice from different angles, talking an awful lot, but the main thing I remember is how he thinks puns are useful and wishes people took them more seriously.
Female narrator suggests what this film might be about while we see three TV screens and a dark figure in front DJing with tape reels.
TV monitor split-screens with bird sounds mixed with the dialogue.
Kinda turns into a family story and a sex-ed movie. “I sometimes look at my cock. That isn’t cinema, though.”
Amy Taubin calls it “a vitriolic indictment of the sexual politics of the nuclear family” and says it’s the first Godard feature in which Miéville’s influence is evident. In Everything is Cinema, Richard Brody says Godard had accepted a commission to make a Breathless follow-up, hence the title, and says the finished film “has the unpleasant aspect of a medical document.”