"The Children of Marx & Coca Cola". Godard divided this film into a number of chapters, none of long duration. The quoted remark is one of the chapter titles, and could well have been chosen as the title for the film. Note that Godard gives Pepsi equal screen presence. The key male players have already embraced the Communist doctrine and spend their free time agitating and thinking of girls, although their political activities are more youthful exuberance effective agitation. Godard has given them mates on a trajectory where politics is below the radar, creating relationships not made in heaven. Godard again uses voluminous external noises to help keep his protagonists from becoming dominant in the overall perspective of Parisian life and draws the film to a close with a simple plebeian event...
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