Françoise Hardy made her film debut in 1963, after having been chosen by Director Roger Vadim to take the role of Ophélie in his movie Nutty, Naughty Chateau (Château en Suède), according to Françoise Sagan's play. She then did three to four performances as singer in some musicarelli in Italy as for example: Questo pazzo, pazzo mondo della canzone in 1965. This same year, Hardy also played a minor role as the Mayor's assistant in Clive Donner’s film What's New Pussycat? and then held a supporting role in A Bullet Through the Heart (Une balle au cœur), directed by Jean-Daniel Pollet. In 1966, she made a cameo appearance in a scene from Jean-Luc Godard's film Masculin, féminin then participate in Grand Prix, a US blockbuster on racing of Formula 1, directed by John Frankenheimer, in which she is Lisa, the girlfriend of Nino Barlini, a fictional Italian driver. After this film, Françoise Hardy does not want to make a cinema anymore but in 1972 she plays a hippie; just one cameo for the film, Les Colombes (The Doves), by the Québécois filmmaker, Jean-Claude Lord. This will be her last appearance on the screens if not that of 1976 in Claude Lelouch’s film If I Had to Do It All Over Again (Si c’était à refaire), where she appears in her role of singer to interpret just one song.