Full Frontal is a film by Steven Soderbergh, about a day in the life of people in Hollywood. The film stars David Duchovny, Julia Roberts, and Mary McCormack and was shot on digital video and released in 2002. The film deals with a bunch of people and shows them going about their daily lives, the point being to ridicule the way of life in the superflous movie industry. The film also tries to blur the line between what is real and what is fiction; thus the film is also about the art of film making. It is in the loose structural style and narrative ambiguity of the French New Wave, and it got a lot of criticism for being the way it is. Steven Soderbergh (born January 14, 1963, Atlanta, Georgia) is an American film director. ... ... Duchovny as Fox Mulder on The X-Files David William Duchovny (born August 7, 1960 in New York City) is an American television and film actor, most famous for playing the character of FBI agent Fox Mulder on The X-Files TV series. ... Julia Roberts Julia Roberts (born Julie Fiona Roberts on October 28, 1967, in Atlanta, Georgia, USA) is a movie star who shot to fame during the early 1990s after starring in the romantic comedy Pretty Woman opposite Richard Gere. ... Mary McCormack (born February 8, 1969 in Plainfield, New Jersey) is an American television and film actress. ... Digital video is a type of video recording system that works by using a digital, rather than analog, representation of the video signal. ... François Truffauts New Wave film Jules et Jim The New Wave (French: la Nouvelle Vague) of French cinema was a cinematic movement of the late 1950s (Le Beau Serge, by Claude Chabrol) and 1960s. ...