Raoul Coutard (16 September 1924 – 8 November 2016) was a French cinematographer. He is best known for his connection with the Nouvelle Vague period and particularly for his work with director Jean-Luc Godard. Coutard also shot films for New Wave director François Truffaut as well as Jacques Demy, a contemporary frequently associated with the movement. He shot over 75 films during a career that lasted nearly half a century. Coutard originally planned to study chemistry, but switched to photography because of the cost of tuition. In 1945, Coutard was sent to participate in the French Indochina War; he lived in Vietnam for the next 11 years, working as a war photographer, eventually becoming a freelancer for Paris Match and Look. In 1956, he was approached to shoot a film by Pierre Schoendoerffer, La Passe du Diable. Coutard had never used a movie camera before, and reportedly agreed to the job because of a misunderstanding (he believed he was being hired to shoot production stills ...
Contempt
1963
Z
1969
La Chinoise
1967
The Making of Rocky Road to Dublin
2004
Nouvelle Vague : El cine sin dogmas
2000
The Hideout
1971
Pierre Schoendoerffer, the Sentinel of Memory
2011
CzechMate: In Search of Jiří Menzel
2018
Chambre 12, Hôtel de Suède
1993
Il était une fois... « Jules et Jim »
2008
The Bamboo Incident
1970
Godard, Love and Poetry
2007