Raoul Coutard, the renowned cinematographer who worked with directors including Jean-Luc Godard and François Truffaut during the French New Wave movement, died Tuesday aged 92, his family told AFP. The Frenchman shot some of the biggest French films of the second half of the 20th century, including "Breathless" (1960), "Contempt" (1963), "Pierrot le Fou" (1965) and "Jules and Jim" (1962), along with "Z" alongside Greek director Costa-Gavras.
Born in Paris on September 16, 1924, Coutard was a sergeant in the colonial infantry during the Indochina War, commanding a section in Laos before becoming an army photographer and then, while still in Southeast Asia, a photographer for Paris Match and Life magazines. It was there that he met French filmmaker Pierre Schoendoerffer, with whom he collaborated on his first films including "The Devil's Pass" (1958) and "Ramuntcho" (1959). But it was with the film "Breathless" - a collaboration with Godard - that he began to break new ground, marking the start of the New Wave movement.
The cinematographer became famous for his work shot with a handheld camera and his use of natural light, causing controversy within the profession at the time.