Like A Bout de Souffle, the film divides its time between action sequences and pensive, discursive scenes. It serves up a typically Godardian buffet of both high and low culture references. Just as he had mixed Faulkner with Bogart in his first film, here the director includes references to art, poetry, film and philosophy. Like TS Eliot’s The Waste Land, the film is a kind of patchwork of references. The artists mentioned range from Roy Lichtenstein to Velázquez. The writers who are referenced are similarly varied and include Honoré de Balzac, Robert Browning (‘a poet named revolver’), Raymond Chandler, Joseph Conrad, F Scott Fitzgerald and William Shakespeare.