I wrote during, in The Voice, during that period a lot about really... improvisation and freeing ourselves from... I guess from professionalism. And they are, that loosening up of like, say what I wrote, I remember and I spent in several columns about the changing, you know, technology and the... and that now, that there is no such thing as normal lighting or normal focus or normal this or normal that, that you can overexpose or underexpose or... and its all open, it depends what you need. Now that was of course not what was being taught in Hollywood. The only time when Nouvelle Vague did that was, it was done by Resnais, Resnais in Marienbad when he suddenly overexposed a scene and that was, you know, avant-garde for, for that regular movie critics. Look, look that's new, that's and, you know, that's usually, I wrote in The Village Voice on the, about films that I liked and I thought that those films should be brought to attention and the only, maybe there were two or three cases where when I wrote at wrote negatives... negative reviews when I, I attacked even films that I almost liked, like Marienbad, but I had to attack it because all the reviewers, all the press weeklies, dailies, after reviewing, telling what it is, always added like a sentence. I said this is real what the real avant-garde is, this, you know, not the this New York underground and underground there's and avant-gardists who are making those films that nobody understands and nobody knows what's it all about, they are all amateurs and here is an example, so I, of course, I had to attack it.