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  1. Fabrice Aragno (born 31 March 1970) is a Swiss director, producer, and cinematographer. Career. He attended the École cantonale d'art de Lausanne, graduating in 1998. Aragno has made several short films, including Dimanche (his graduation film, selected for the 1999 Cannes Film Festival ), Le Jeu (2003), and Autoure de Claire (2010).

  2. Feb 12, 2024 · Fabrice Aragno was Jean-Luc Godard’s closest collaborator for the last two decades of his life. It started with Godard’s 2004 feature, Notre musique (which, coincidentally, is briefly reprised in Drôles de Guerres ), a few years after the Swiss filmmaker finished his studies at the prestigious ECAL art school in Lausanne.

  3. Jul 9, 2021 · Fabrice Aragno, a frequent Jean-Luc Godard collaborator, talks presenting his feature debut at Cannes and making Godard's 'final gesture.'

  4. Jan 30, 2019 · After the film (whose French title, Le Livre d’Image, translates to something closer to the colloquial English “the picture book”) made its North American premiere at last year’s Toronto International Film Festival, I sat down for a brief interview with Fabrice Aragno, Godard’s editor, cinematographer, and all-around ...

  5. When Fabrice Aragno went to film school, he was written off as a creator of meaningless images. What was the point of his thesis picture? Where was the emotion? These questions, however, didn't matter much to him, so he ignored them. What mattered was assembling work that he felt was sincere. In Aragno's opinion, cinema doesn't need an explanation.

  6. Fabrice Aragno est un réalisateur, monteur et directeur de la photographie suisse né le 31 mars 1970 à Neuchâtel. Collaborateur de Jean-Luc Godard depuis 2002, il a notamment travaillé sur Notre Musique, Film Socialisme, Adieu au langage, Le Livre d'image et le court-métrage Les Trois Désastres.

  7. Fabrice Aragno is known for Luchando frijoles - Cuba de un día a otro (1997), And Outside Life Goes On (2021) and Goodbye to Language (2014).