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Wikipedia

François Truffaut

François Roland Truffaut (UK: /ˈtrf, ˈtrʊ-/ TROO-foh, TRUU-, US: /trˈf/ troo-FOH;[1][2] French: [fʁɑ̃swa ʁɔlɑ̃ tʁyfo]; 6 February 1932 – 21 October 1984) was a French film director, screenwriter, producer, actor, and film critic. He is widely regarded as one of the founders of the French New Wave.[3] After a career of more than 25 years, he remains an icon of the French film industry.

François Truffaut
Truffaut in 1965
Born
François Roland Truffaut

(1932-02-06)6 February 1932
Paris, France
Died21 October 1984(1984-10-21) (aged 52)
Resting placeMontmartre Cemetery
Occupations
  • Director
  • screenwriter
  • producer
  • actor
  • film critic
Years active1955–1984
MovementFrench New Wave
Spouse
Madeleine Morgenstern
(m. 1957; div. 1965)
PartnerFanny Ardant (1981–1984; his death)
Children3
RelativesIgnace Morgenstern (father-in-law)

Truffaut's film The 400 Blows (1959) is a defining film of the French New Wave movement, and has four sequels, Antoine et Colette (1962), Stolen Kisses (1968), Bed and Board (1970), and Love on the Run (1979). Truffaut's 1973 film Day for Night earned him critical acclaim and several awards, including the BAFTA Award for Best Film and the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. His other notable films include Shoot the Piano Player (1960), Jules and Jim (1962), The Soft Skin (1964), The Wild Child (1970), Two English Girls (1971), The Last Metro (1980), and The Woman Next Door (1981). He is also known for his supporting role in Steven Spielberg's science fiction film Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977).

Truffaut also wrote the notable book Hitchcock/Truffaut (1966), which detailed his interviews with the film director Alfred Hitchcock during the 1960s.

Early life

Truffaut was born in Paris on 6 February 1932. His mother was Janine de Montferrand. His mother's future husband, Roland Truffaut, accepted him as an adopted son and gave him his surname. He was passed around to live with various nannies and his grandmother for a number of years. His grandmother instilled in him her love of books and music. He lived with her until her death, when Truffaut was eight years old. It was only after her death that he lived with his parents.[4] Truffaut's biological father's identity is unknown, but a private detective agency in 1968 revealed that its inquiry into the matter led to a Roland Levy, a Jewish dentist from Bayonne. Truffaut's mother's family disputed the finding but Truffaut believed and embraced it.[5]

Truffaut often stayed with friends and tried to be out of the house as much as possible. He knew Robert Lachenay from childhood, and they were lifelong best friends. Lachenay was the inspiration for the character René Bigey in The 400 Blows and worked as an assistant on some of Truffaut's films. Cinema offered Truffaut the greatest escape from an unsatisfying home life. He was eight years old when he saw his first movie, Abel Gance's Paradis Perdu (Paradise Lost, 1939), beginning his obsession. He frequently skipped school and sneaked into theaters because he lacked the money for admission. After being expelled from several schools, at age 14 he decided to become self-taught. Two of his academic goals were to watch three movies a day and read three books a week.[4][6]

Truffaut frequented Henri Langlois's Cinémathèque Française, where he was exposed to countless foreign films, becoming familiar with American cinema and directors such as John Ford, Howard Hawks and Nicholas Ray, as well as those of British director Alfred Hitchcock.[7]

Career

André Bazin

After starting his own film club in 1948, Truffaut met André Bazin, who had a great effect on his professional and personal life. Bazin was a critic and the head of another film society at the time. He became a personal friend of Truffaut's and helped him out of various financial and criminal situations during his formative years.[8]

Truffaut joined the French Army in 1950, aged 18, but spent the next two years trying to escape. He was arrested for attempting to desert the army and incarcerated in military prison. Bazin used his political contacts to get Truffaut released and set him up with a job at his new film magazine, Cahiers du cinéma.

Cahiers du Cinéma

Over the next few years, Truffaut became a critic (and later editor) at Cahiers, where he became notorious for his brutal, unforgiving reviews. He was called "The Gravedigger of French Cinema"[9] and was the only French critic not invited to the 1958 Cannes Film Festival. He supported Bazin in developing one of the most influential theories of cinema, the auteur theory.[10]

In 1954, Truffaut wrote an article in Cahiers du cinéma, "Une Certaine Tendance du Cinéma Français" ("A Certain Trend of French Cinema"),[6] in which he attacked the state of French films, lambasting certain screenwriters and producers, and listing eight directors he considered incapable of devising the kinds of "vile" and "grotesque" characters and storylines he called characteristic of the mainstream French film industry: Jean Renoir, Robert Bresson, Jean Cocteau, Jacques Becker, Abel Gance, Max Ophuls, Jacques Tati and Roger Leenhardt. The article caused a storm of controversy, and landed Truffaut an offer to write for the nationally circulated, more widely read cultural weekly Arts-Lettres-Spectacles. Truffaut wrote more than 500 film articles for that publication over the next four years.

Truffaut later devised the auteur theory, according to which the director was the "author" of his work and great directors such as Renoir or Hitchcock have distinct styles and themes that permeate their films. Although his theory was not widely accepted then, it gained some support in the 1960s from American critic Andrew Sarris. In 1967, Truffaut published his book-length interview of Hitchcock, Hitchcock/Truffaut (New York: Simon and Schuster).

Short films

After having been a critic, Truffaut decided to make films. He began with the short film Une Visite (1955) and followed it with Les Mistons (1957).

The 400 Blows

After seeing Orson Welles's Touch of Evil at the Expo 58, Truffaut made his feature film directorial debut with The 400 Blows (1959), which received considerable critical and commercial acclaim. He won the Best Director award at the 1959 Cannes Film Festival. The film follows the character of Antoine Doinel through his perilous misadventures in school, an unhappy home life and later reform school. The film is highly autobiographical. Both Truffaut and Doinel were only children of loveless marriages; they both committed petty crimes of theft and truancy from the military. Truffaut cast Jean-Pierre Léaud as Doinel. Léaud was seen as an ordinary boy of 14 who auditioned for the role after seeing a flyer, but interviews after the film's release (one is included on the Criterion DVD of the film) reveal Léaud's natural sophistication and an instinctive understanding of acting for the camera. Léaud and Truffaut collaborated on several films over the years. Their most noteworthy collaboration was the continuation of Doinel's story in a series of films called "The Antoine Doinel Cycle".

The primary focus of The 400 Blows is Doinel's life. The film follows him through his troubled adolescence. He is caught in between an unstable parental relationship and an isolated youth. From birth Truffaut was thrown into a troublesome situation. As he was born out of wedlock, his birth had to remain a secret because of the stigma of illegitimacy. He was registered as "a child born to an unknown father" in hospital records and looked after by a nurse for an extended period of time. His mother eventually married and her husband gave François his surname, Truffaut.

Although he was legally accepted as a legitimate child, his parents did not accept him. The Truffauts had another child, who died shortly after birth. This experience saddened them greatly and as a result they despised François because of the regret he represented (Knopf 4[specify]). He was an outcast from his earliest years, dismissed as an unwanted child. François was sent to live with his grandparents. When his grandmother died, his parents took him in, much to his mother's dismay. His experiences with his mother were harsh. He recalled being treated badly by her but found comfort in his father's laughter and spirit. François had a very depressing childhood after moving in with his parents. They left him alone when they took vacations. He even recalled being alone during Christmas. Being left alone forced François into independence, often doing various tasks around the house to improve it, such as painting or changing the electric outlets. Sadly, these kind gestures often resulted in catastrophic events, causing him to get scolded by his mother. His father mostly laughed them off.

The 400 Blows marked the beginning of the French New Wave movement, which gave directors such as Jean-Luc Godard, Claude Chabrol and Jacques Rivette a wider audience. The New Wave dealt with a self-conscious rejection of traditional cinema structure. This was a topic on which Truffaut had been writing for years.

Shoot the Piano Player

 
Truffaut and actress Françoise Dorléac during a visit to Israel, 1963

Following the success of The 400 Blows, Truffaut featured disjunctive editing and seemingly random voiceovers in his next film, Shoot the Piano Player (1960), starring Charles Aznavour. Truffaut has said that in the middle of filming, he realized that he hated gangsters. But since gangsters were a main part of the story, he toned up the comical aspect of the characters and made the movie more to his liking.

Even though Shoot the Piano Player was much appreciated by critics, it performed poorly at the box office. While the film focused on two of the French New Wave's favourite elements, American film noir and themselves, Truffaut never again experimented as heavily.

Jules and Jim and The Soft Skin

 
Truffaut during his visit to Helsinki, Finland on 21 December 1964

In 1962, Truffaut directed his third movie, Jules and Jim, a romantic drama starring Jeanne Moreau. The film was very popular and highly influential.

In 1963, Truffaut was approached to direct the American film Bonnie and Clyde, with a treatment written by Esquire journalists David Newman and Robert Benton intended to introduce the French New Wave to Hollywood. Although he was interested enough to help in script development, Truffaut ultimately declined, but not before interesting Jean-Luc Godard and American actor and would-be producer Warren Beatty, who proceeded with the film with director Arthur Penn.

The fourth movie Truffaut directed was The Soft Skin (1964). It was not acclaimed on its release.

Fahrenheit 451

Truffaut's first non-French film was a 1966 adaptation of Ray Bradbury's classic science fiction novel Fahrenheit 451, showcasing Truffaut's love of books. His only English-speaking film, made on location in England, was a great challenge for Truffaut, because he barely spoke English himself. Shot by cinematographer Nicolas Roeg, this was Truffaut's first film in colour. The larger-scale production was difficult for Truffaut, who had worked only with small crews and budgets. The shoot was also strained by a conflict with lead actor Oscar Werner, who was unhappy with his character and stormed off set, leaving Truffaut to shoot scenes using a body double shot from behind. The film was a commercial failure, and Truffaut never worked outside France again. The film's cult standing has steadily grown, although some critics remain dubious of it as an adaptation.[11] A 2014 consideration of the film by Charles Silver praises it.[12]

 
Truffaut and Claude Jade at the première of Love on the Run in Luxembourg, April 1979

Thrillers and Stolen Kisses

Stolen Kisses (1968) was a continuation of the Antoine Doinel Cycle starring Claude Jade as Antoine's fiancée and later wife Christine Darbon. During its filming Truffaut fell in love with Jade and was briefly engaged to her. It was a big hit on the international art circuit. A short time later Jade made her Hollywood debut in Hitchcock's Topaz.[13]

Truffaut worked on projects with varied subjects. The Bride Wore Black (1968), a brutal tale of revenge, is a stylish homage to the films of Alfred Hitchcock (once again starring Moreau). Mississippi Mermaid (1969), with Catherine Deneuve and Jean-Paul Belmondo, is an identity-bending romantic thriller. Both films are based on novels by Cornell Woolrich.

The Wild Child (1970) included Truffaut's acting debut in the lead role of 18th-century physician Jean Marc Gaspard Itard.

Doinel marries Christine

Bed and Board (1970) was another Antoine Doinel film, also with Jade, now Léaud's on-screen-wife.

Two English Girls (1971) is the female reflection of the same love story as "Jules et Jim". It is based on a story by Henri-Pierre Roché, who wrote Jules and Jim, about a man who falls equally in love with two sisters, and their love affair over a period of years.

Such a Gorgeous Kid Like Me (1972) was a screwball comedy that was not well received.

Day for Night

Day for Night won Truffaut a Best Foreign Film Oscar.[14] The film is probably his most reflective work. It is the story of a film crew trying to finish a film while dealing with the personal and professional problems that accompany making a movie. Truffaut plays the director of the fictional film being made. This film features scenes from his previous films. It is considered his best film since his earliest work. Time magazine placed it on its list of 100 Best Films of the Century (along with The 400 Blows).

In 1975, Truffaut gained more notoriety with The Story of Adèle H.; Isabelle Adjani in the title role earned a nomination for an Academy Award for Best Actress. His 1976 film Small Change was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film.

The late 1970s and the last Doinel

The Man Who Loved Women (1977), a romantic drama, was a minor hit.

Truffaut also appeared in Steven Spielberg's 1977 Close Encounters of the Third Kind as scientist Claude Lacombe.[15]

The Green Room (1978) starred Truffaut in the lead. It was a box-office flop, so he made Love on the Run (1979) starring Léaud and Jade as the final movie of the Doinel Cycle.

The Last Metro

One of Truffaut's final films gave him an international revival. The Last Metro (1980) garnered 12 César Award nominations and 10 wins, including Best Director.

Final films and legacy

Truffaut's last film was shot in black and white, giving his career a sense of having bookends. Confidentially Yours is Truffaut's tribute to his favourite director, Hitchcock. It deals with numerous Hitchcockian themes, such as private guilt versus public innocence, a woman investigating a murder, and anonymous locations.

A keen reader, Truffaut adapted many literary works, including two novels by Henri-Pierre Roché, Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451, Henry James's "The Altar of the Dead", filmed as The Green Room, and several American detective novels.

Truffaut's other films were from original screenplays, often co-written by the screenwriters Suzanne Schiffman or Jean Gruault. They featured diverse subjects, the sombre The Story of Adèle H. inspired by the life of the daughter of Victor Hugo, with Isabelle Adjani; Day for Night, shot at the Victorine Studios, depicting the ups and downs of filmmaking; and The Last Metro, set during the German occupation of France during World War II, a film rewarded by ten César Awards.

Known as a lifelong cinephile, Truffaut once (according to the 1993 documentary film François Truffaut: Stolen Portraits) threw a hitchhiker out of his car after learning that he didn't like films.

Many filmmakers admire Truffaut, and tributes to his work have appeared in films such as Almost Famous, Face and The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, as well as novelist Haruki Murakami's Kafka on the Shore. In conversation with Michael Ondaatje, film editor Walter Murch mentions the influence Truffaut had on him as a young man, saying he was "electrified" by the freeze-frame at the end of The 400 Blows, and that Godard's Breathless and Truffaut's Shoot the Piano Player reinforced the idea that he could make films.[16]

Roger Ebert included The 400 Blows in his canon of Great Movies, and concludes: "one of his most curious, haunting films is The Green Room (1978), based on the Henry James story 'The Altar of the Dead,' about a man and a woman who share a passion for remembering their dead loved ones. Jonathan Rosenbaum, who thinks The Green Room may be Truffaut's best film, told me he thinks of it as the director's homage to the auteur theory. That theory, created by Bazin and his disciples (Truffaut, Godard, Resnais, Chabrol, Rohmer, Malle), declared that the director was the true author of a film—not the studio, the screenwriter, the star, the genre. If the figures in the green room stand for the great directors of the past, perhaps there is a shrine there now to Truffaut. One likes to think of the ghost of Antoine Doinel lighting a candle before it."[17]

Commentary of other filmmakers

Truffaut expressed his admiration for filmmakers such as Luis Buñuel, Ingmar Bergman, Robert Bresson, Roberto Rossellini, and Alfred Hitchcock. He wrote Hitchcock/Truffaut, a book about Hitchcock, based on a lengthy series of interviews.[18]

Of Jean Renoir, he said: "I think Renoir is the only filmmaker who's practically infallible, who has never made a mistake on film. And I think if he never made mistakes, it's because he always found solutions based on simplicity—human solutions. He's one film director who never pretended. He never tried to have a style, and if you know his work—which is very comprehensive, since he dealt with all sorts of subjects—when you get stuck, especially as a young filmmaker, you can think of how Renoir would have handled the situation, and you generally find a solution".[19]

Truffaut called German filmmaker Werner Herzog "the most important film director alive."[20]

Truffaut and Jean-Luc Godard, his colleague from Les Cahiers du Cinéma, worked together closely during their start as film directors although they had different working methods. Tensions came to the surface after May 68: Godard wanted a more political, specifically Marxist cinema, Truffaut was critical of creating films for primarily political purposes.[21] In 1973, Godard wrote Truffaut a lengthy and raucous private letter peppered with accusations and insinuations, several times stating that as a filmmaker "you're a liar" and that his latest film (Day for Night) had been unsatisfying, lying and evasive: "You're a liar, because the scene between you and Jacqueline Bisset last week at Francis [a Paris restaurant] isn't included in your movie, and one also can't help wondering why the director is the only guy who isn't sleeping around in Day for Night" (Truffaut directed the film, wrote it and played the director on the film set in the film). Godard also implied that Truffaut had gone commercial and easy.[22]

Truffaut replied with an angry 20-page letter in which he accused Godard of being a radical-chic hypocrite, a man who believed everyone to be "equal" in theory only. "The Ursula Andress of militancy—like Brando—a piece of shit on a pedestal." Godard later tried to reconcile with Truffaut, but they never spoke to or saw each other again.[23] After Truffaut's death, Godard wrote the introduction to a generous selection of his correspondence, and included his own 1973 letter. He also offered a long tribute in his film Histoire(s) du cinéma.[24]

Personal life

Truffaut was married to Madeleine Morgenstern from 1957 to 1965, and they had two daughters, Laura (born 1959) and Eva (born 1961). Madeleine was the daughter of Ignace Morgenstern, managing director of one of France's largest film distribution companies, Cocinor, and was largely responsible for securing funding for Truffaut's first films.

In 1968 Truffaut was engaged to actress Claude Jade (Stolen Kisses, Bed and Board, Love on the Run); he and Fanny Ardant (The Woman Next Door, Confidentially Yours) lived together from 1981 to 1984 and had a daughter, Joséphine Truffaut (born 28 September 1983).[4][25]

Truffaut was an atheist, but had great respect for the Catholic Church and requested a Requiem Mass for his funeral.[26][27]

Death

 
Truffaut's grave in Montmartre Cemetery, Paris

In July 1983, following his first stroke and being diagnosed with a brain tumour,[28] Truffaut rented France Gall's and Michel Berger's house outside Honfleur, Normandy. He was expected to attend his friend Miloš Forman's Amadeus premiere[29] when he died on 21 October 1984, aged 52, at the American Hospital of Paris in Neuilly-sur-Seine in France.[30]

At the time of his death, he had numerous films in preparation. He had intended to make 30 films and then retire to write books for the remainder of his life. He was five films short of that aim. He is buried in Montmartre Cemetery.[31]

Filmography

Director

Feature films

Year English Title Original title Notes
1959 The 400 Blows Les Quatre Cents Coups Antoine Doinel series
Cannes Film FestivalBest Director
Nominated – Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay[32]
Nominated – Cannes Film FestivalPalme d'Or
1960 Shoot the Piano Player Tirez sur le pianiste
1962 Jules and Jim Jules et Jim Mar del Plata International Film Festival – Best Director
Nominated – Mar del Plata International Film Festival – Best Film
1964 The Soft Skin La Peau douce Nominated – Cannes Film FestivalPalme d'Or
1966 Fahrenheit 451 Fahrenheit 451 Filmed in English
Nominated – Venice Film FestivalGolden Lion
1968 The Bride Wore Black La Mariée était en noir
1968 Stolen Kisses Baisers volés Antoine Doinel series
Nominated – Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film[33]
1969 Mississippi Mermaid La sirène du Mississippi
1970 The Wild Child L'Enfant sauvage
1970 Bed and Board Domicile conjugal Antoine Doinel series
1971 Two English Girls Les Deux anglaises et le continent
1972 Such a Gorgeous Kid Like Me Une belle fille comme moi
1973 Day for Night La Nuit américaine Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film[14]
BAFTA Award for Best Film
BAFTA Award for Best Direction
Nominated – Academy Award for Best Director
Nominated – Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay[14]
1975 The Story of Adèle H. L'Histoire d'Adèle H. Nominated – César Award for Best Director
1976 Small Change L'Argent de poche Nominated – Berlin International Film FestivalGolden Bear[34]
1977 The Man Who Loved Women L'Homme qui aimait les femmes Nominated – Berlin International Film FestivalGolden Bear[35]
1978 The Green Room La Chambre verte
1979 Love on the Run L'Amour en fuite Antoine Doinel series
Nominated – Berlin International Film FestivalGolden Bear[36]
1980 The Last Metro Le Dernier métro César Award for Best Film
César Award for Best Director
César Award for Best Writing
Nominated – Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film[37]
1981 The Woman Next Door La Femme d'à côté
1983 Confidentially Yours Vivement dimanche! Nominated – César Award for Best Director

Shorts films and collaborations

Year Title Original title Notes
1955 A Visit Une Visite
1957 The Mischief Makers Les Mistons
1958 A Story of Water Une Histoire d'eau Co-directed with Jean-Luc Godard
1961 The Army Game "Tire-au-flanc 62" Directed by Claude de Givray; Truffaut credited as co-director
1962 Antoine and Colette Antoine et Colette Antoine Doinel series, segment from Love at Twenty

Screenwriter only

Year Title Original title Notes
1960 Breathless À bout de souffle Directed by Jean-Luc Godard
1988 The Little Thief La Petite voleuse Directed by Claude Miller; released posthumously
1995 Belle Époque (miniseries) [Wikidata] Belle Époque Miniseries, with Jean Gruault; directed by Gavin Millar; released posthumously

Actor

Year Title Role Notes
1956 Le Coup du berger Party guest Uncredited, Directed by Jacques Rivette
1956 La sonate à Kreutzer
1959 The 400 Blows Man in Funfair Uncredited
1963 À tout prendre Himself Uncredited
1964 The Soft Skin Petrol pump attendant Voice, Uncredited
1970 The Wild Child Dr. Jean Itard Lead role
1970 Bed & Board Newspaper vendor Voice, Uncredited
1971 Two English Girls Récitant / Narrator Voice, Uncredited
1972 Such a Gorgeous Kid Like Me Un journaliste Voice, Uncredited
1973 Day for Night Ferrand, the film director Lead role
1975 The Story of Adèle H. Officer Uncredited
1976 Small Change Martine's Father Uncredited
1977 The Man Who Loved Women Man at Funeral Uncredited
1977 Close Encounters of the Third Kind Claude Lacombe Directed by Steven Spielberg
Nominated – BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role
1978 The Green Room Julien Davenne Lead role
1981 The Woman Next Door Cameo Uncredited

Producer only

Year Title Original title Notes
1958 Good Anna Anna your mam Directed by Harry Kümel
1960 Testament of Orpheus Le testament d'Orphée Directed by Jean Cocteau
1961 The Gold Bug Le scarabée d'or Directed by Robert Lachenay
1961 Paris Belongs to Us Paris nous appartient Directed by Jacques Rivette
1968 Naked Childhood L'Enfance Nue Directed by Maurice Pialat

Bibliography

  • Les 400 Coups (1960) with M. Moussy (English translation: The 400 Blows)
  • Le Cinéma selon Alfred Hitchcock (1967, second edition 1983) (English translation: Hitchcock and Hitchcock/Truffaut with the collaboration of Helen G. Scott)
  • Les Aventures d'Antoine Doinel (1970) (English translation: Adventures of Antoine Doinel; translated by Helen G. Scott)
  • Jules et Jim (film script) (1971) (English translation: Jules and Jim; translated by Nicholas Fry)
  • La Nuit américaine et le Journal de Fahrenheit 451 (1974)
  • Le Plaisir des yeux (1975)
  • L'Argent de poche (1976) (English title: Small Change: A Film Novel; translated by Anselm Hollo)
  • L'Homme qui aimait les femmes (1977)
  • Les Films de ma vie (1981) (English translation: The Films in My Life, translated by Leonard Mayhew)
  • Correspondance (1988) (English translation: Correspondence, 1945–1984; translated by Gilbert Adair, released posthumously)
  • Le Cinéma selon François Truffaut (1988) edited by Anne Gillain (released posthumously)
  • Belle époque (1996) with Jean Gruault (released posthumously)

See also

References

  1. ^ Wells, John C. (2008). Longman Pronunciation Dictionary (3rd ed.). Longman. ISBN 978-1-4058-8118-0.
  2. ^ Jones, Daniel (2011). Roach, Peter; Setter, Jane; Esling, John (eds.). Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary (18th ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-15255-6.
  3. ^ Obituary Variety, 24 October 1984.
  4. ^ a b c "Francois Truffaut – French New Wave Director". Newwavefilm.com. Retrieved 6 February 2012.
  5. ^ Robert Ingram; Paul Duncan (2004). François Truffaut: Film Author, 1932-1983. Taschen. p. 94. ISBN 978-3-8228-2260-9.
  6. ^ a b "François Truffaut – Movie and Film Biography and Filmography". Allmovie.com. 21 October 1984. Retrieved 6 February 2012.
  7. ^ "'Francois Truffaut' at the Cinematheque Francaise: Exhibition Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 31 January 2017.
  8. ^ Truffaut, François (1989). Correspondence, 1945–1984. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. pp. 17, 50, 57.
  9. ^ Sukhdev Sandhu (2 April 2009). "Film as an act of love". New Statesman.
  10. ^ The Editors of Encyclopædia Britannica (20 July 1998). "Auteur theory Filmmaking". Encyclopedia Britannica.
  11. ^ John Brosnan and Peter Nicholls, Fahrenheit 451, Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. Retrieved 13 September 2019.
  12. ^ Charles Silver, Francois Truffaut's Fahrenheit 451, Inside Out, MoMA. Retrieved 13 September 2019.
  13. ^ Tino Balio, United Artists: The Company That Changed the Film Industry, University of Wisconsin Press, 1987 p. 282
  14. ^ a b c "The 47th Academy Awards (1975) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. Retrieved 10 January 2012.
  15. ^ Aurélien Ferenczi (26 October 2014). "Qu'allait-donc faire Truffaut chez Spielberg ?". Télérama.
  16. ^ Ondaatje, Michael (2002). The Conversations: Walter Murch and the Editing of Film. pp. 24–25.
  17. ^ Ebert, Roger (8 August 1999). "The 400 Blows". Chicago Sun Times.
  18. ^ François Truffaut. "Hitchcock". Goodreads. Retrieved 14 March 2016.
  19. ^ On Jean Renoir Truffaut's Last Interview
  20. ^ Cronin, Paul; Werner Herzog (2002). Herzog on Herzog. London: Faber and Faber. pp. vii–viii. ISBN 978-0-571-20708-4. truffaut.
  21. ^ "When Truffaut met Godard". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 10 December 2022.
  22. ^ Truffaut, Correspondance, ed. Godard.
  23. ^ Gleiberman, Owen. "Godard and Truffaut: Their spiky, complex friendship is its own great story in 'Two in the Wave".
  24. ^ de Baecque, Antione; Toubiana, Serge (2000). Truffaut: A Biography. University of California Press. ISBN 0520225244.
  25. ^ Eric Pace (22 October 1984). "Francois Truffaut, New Wave Director, Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved 1 May 2013. Mr. Truffaut's 1957 marriage to Madeleine Morgenstern ended in divorce. He is survived by two adult daughters from that marriage, Laura Truffaut-Wong of San Francisco and Eva Truffaut of Paris, and by a 13-month-old daughter, Josephine.
  26. ^ Eric Michael Mazur (2011). Encyclopedia of Religion and Film. ABC-CLIO. p. 438. ISBN 9780313330728. Yet Truffaut, an atheist, was not stumping for God with these conservative attacks.
  27. ^ David Sterritt (1999). The Films of Jean-Luc Godard: Seeing the Invisible. Cambridge University Press. p. 17. ISBN 9780521589710. One way of understanding Godard's approach is to contrast it with that of François Truffaut, one of his most respected New Wave colleagues. As a self-described atheist, Truffaut took special pleasure in the materiality of cinema, noting that no photographic image can be obtained without real, physical light making direct contact with a real, physical object in the immediate presence of the camera.
  28. ^ Antoine de Baecque and Serge Toubiana's Biography of François Truffaut
  29. ^ "Truffaut : un classique (1970-80)". francetv.fr. Retrieved 14 March 2016.
  30. ^ "Francois Truffaut, New Wave Director, Dies". The New York Times. 22 October 1984. Retrieved 26 May 2011. François Truffaut, the exuberant film director whose depictions of children, women and romantic obsessions helped make him a leader of the New Wave group of French movie makers, died yesterday. He was 52 years old. Mr. Truffaut died at the American Hospital in Neuilly-sur-Seine, a Paris suburb, a hospital spokesman said. He had been hospitalized about 10 days ago for treatment of cancer.
  31. ^ "Journées du patrimoine 2011 Paris 18ème, le programme". Le Figaro. 14 September 2011. Retrieved 29 December 2016.
  32. ^ "The 32nd Academy Awards (1960) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. Retrieved 15 November 2011.
  33. ^ "The 41st Academy Awards (1969) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. Retrieved 15 November 2011.
  34. ^ "IMDB.com: Awards for Small Change". imdb.com. Retrieved 16 July 2010.
  35. ^ "IMDB.com: Awards for The Man Who Loved Women". imdb.com. Retrieved 25 July 2010.
  36. ^ "IMDB.com: Awards for Love on the Run". imdb.com. Retrieved 14 August 2010.
  37. ^ "The 53rd Academy Awards (1981) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org. Retrieved 8 June 2013.
  38. ^ . Archived from the original on 31 August 2014. Retrieved 29 June 2014.

External links

  • François Truffaut at IMDb
  • New Wave Film Encyclopedia: "François Truffaut" an extensive biography
  • François Truffaut complete biography: "François Truffaut" 26 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  • François Truffaut bibliography via the UC Berkeley Media Resources Center
  • Francois Truffaut at The Guardian Film
  • at The New York Times Movies
  • François Truffaut collected news and commentary at The New York Times
  • Works by or about François Truffaut in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
  • AllMovie.com Biography

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Truffaut redirects here For other people with that surname see Truffaut surname Francois Roland Truffaut UK ˈ t r uː f oʊ ˈ t r ʊ TROO foh TRUU US t r uː ˈ f oʊ troo FOH 1 2 French fʁɑ swa ʁɔlɑ tʁyfo 6 February 1932 21 October 1984 was a French film director screenwriter producer actor and film critic He is widely regarded as one of the founders of the French New Wave 3 After a career of more than 25 years he remains an icon of the French film industry Francois TruffautTruffaut in 1965BornFrancois Roland Truffaut 1932 02 06 6 February 1932Paris FranceDied21 October 1984 1984 10 21 aged 52 Neuilly sur Seine FranceResting placeMontmartre CemeteryOccupationsDirectorscreenwriterproduceractorfilm criticYears active1955 1984MovementFrench New WaveSpouseMadeleine Morgenstern m 1957 div 1965 wbr PartnerFanny Ardant 1981 1984 his death Children3RelativesIgnace Morgenstern father in law Truffaut s film The 400 Blows 1959 is a defining film of the French New Wave movement and has four sequels Antoine et Colette 1962 Stolen Kisses 1968 Bed and Board 1970 and Love on the Run 1979 Truffaut s 1973 film Day for Night earned him critical acclaim and several awards including the BAFTA Award for Best Film and the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film His other notable films include Shoot the Piano Player 1960 Jules and Jim 1962 The Soft Skin 1964 The Wild Child 1970 Two English Girls 1971 The Last Metro 1980 and The Woman Next Door 1981 He is also known for his supporting role in Steven Spielberg s science fiction film Close Encounters of the Third Kind 1977 Truffaut also wrote the notable book Hitchcock Truffaut 1966 which detailed his interviews with the film director Alfred Hitchcock during the 1960s Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Andre Bazin 2 2 Cahiers du Cinema 2 3 Short films 2 4 The 400 Blows 2 5 Shoot the Piano Player 2 6 Jules and Jim and The Soft Skin 2 7 Fahrenheit 451 2 8 Thrillers and Stolen Kisses 2 9 Doinel marries Christine 2 10 Day for Night 2 11 The late 1970s and the last Doinel 2 12 The Last Metro 2 13 Final films and legacy 3 Commentary of other filmmakers 4 Personal life 5 Death 6 Filmography 6 1 Director 6 1 1 Feature films 6 1 2 Shorts films and collaborations 6 2 Screenwriter only 6 3 Actor 6 4 Producer only 7 Bibliography 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksEarly life EditTruffaut was born in Paris on 6 February 1932 His mother was Janine de Montferrand His mother s future husband Roland Truffaut accepted him as an adopted son and gave him his surname He was passed around to live with various nannies and his grandmother for a number of years His grandmother instilled in him her love of books and music He lived with her until her death when Truffaut was eight years old It was only after her death that he lived with his parents 4 Truffaut s biological father s identity is unknown but a private detective agency in 1968 revealed that its inquiry into the matter led to a Roland Levy a Jewish dentist from Bayonne Truffaut s mother s family disputed the finding but Truffaut believed and embraced it 5 Truffaut often stayed with friends and tried to be out of the house as much as possible He knew Robert Lachenay from childhood and they were lifelong best friends Lachenay was the inspiration for the character Rene Bigey in The 400 Blows and worked as an assistant on some of Truffaut s films Cinema offered Truffaut the greatest escape from an unsatisfying home life He was eight years old when he saw his first movie Abel Gance s Paradis Perdu Paradise Lost 1939 beginning his obsession He frequently skipped school and sneaked into theaters because he lacked the money for admission After being expelled from several schools at age 14 he decided to become self taught Two of his academic goals were to watch three movies a day and read three books a week 4 6 Truffaut frequented Henri Langlois s Cinematheque Francaise where he was exposed to countless foreign films becoming familiar with American cinema and directors such as John Ford Howard Hawks and Nicholas Ray as well as those of British director Alfred Hitchcock 7 Career EditAndre Bazin Edit After starting his own film club in 1948 Truffaut met Andre Bazin who had a great effect on his professional and personal life Bazin was a critic and the head of another film society at the time He became a personal friend of Truffaut s and helped him out of various financial and criminal situations during his formative years 8 Truffaut joined the French Army in 1950 aged 18 but spent the next two years trying to escape He was arrested for attempting to desert the army and incarcerated in military prison Bazin used his political contacts to get Truffaut released and set him up with a job at his new film magazine Cahiers du cinema Cahiers du Cinema Edit Over the next few years Truffaut became a critic and later editor at Cahiers where he became notorious for his brutal unforgiving reviews He was called The Gravedigger of French Cinema 9 and was the only French critic not invited to the 1958 Cannes Film Festival He supported Bazin in developing one of the most influential theories of cinema the auteur theory 10 In 1954 Truffaut wrote an article in Cahiers du cinema Une Certaine Tendance du Cinema Francais A Certain Trend of French Cinema 6 in which he attacked the state of French films lambasting certain screenwriters and producers and listing eight directors he considered incapable of devising the kinds of vile and grotesque characters and storylines he called characteristic of the mainstream French film industry Jean Renoir Robert Bresson Jean Cocteau Jacques Becker Abel Gance Max Ophuls Jacques Tati and Roger Leenhardt The article caused a storm of controversy and landed Truffaut an offer to write for the nationally circulated more widely read cultural weekly Arts Lettres Spectacles Truffaut wrote more than 500 film articles for that publication over the next four years Truffaut later devised the auteur theory according to which the director was the author of his work and great directors such as Renoir or Hitchcock have distinct styles and themes that permeate their films Although his theory was not widely accepted then it gained some support in the 1960s from American critic Andrew Sarris In 1967 Truffaut published his book length interview of Hitchcock Hitchcock Truffaut New York Simon and Schuster Short films Edit After having been a critic Truffaut decided to make films He began with the short film Une Visite 1955 and followed it with Les Mistons 1957 The 400 Blows Edit After seeing Orson Welles s Touch of Evil at the Expo 58 Truffaut made his feature film directorial debut with The 400 Blows 1959 which received considerable critical and commercial acclaim He won the Best Director award at the 1959 Cannes Film Festival The film follows the character of Antoine Doinel through his perilous misadventures in school an unhappy home life and later reform school The film is highly autobiographical Both Truffaut and Doinel were only children of loveless marriages they both committed petty crimes of theft and truancy from the military Truffaut cast Jean Pierre Leaud as Doinel Leaud was seen as an ordinary boy of 14 who auditioned for the role after seeing a flyer but interviews after the film s release one is included on the Criterion DVD of the film reveal Leaud s natural sophistication and an instinctive understanding of acting for the camera Leaud and Truffaut collaborated on several films over the years Their most noteworthy collaboration was the continuation of Doinel s story in a series of films called The Antoine Doinel Cycle The primary focus of The 400 Blows is Doinel s life The film follows him through his troubled adolescence He is caught in between an unstable parental relationship and an isolated youth From birth Truffaut was thrown into a troublesome situation As he was born out of wedlock his birth had to remain a secret because of the stigma of illegitimacy He was registered as a child born to an unknown father in hospital records and looked after by a nurse for an extended period of time His mother eventually married and her husband gave Francois his surname Truffaut Although he was legally accepted as a legitimate child his parents did not accept him The Truffauts had another child who died shortly after birth This experience saddened them greatly and as a result they despised Francois because of the regret he represented Knopf 4 specify He was an outcast from his earliest years dismissed as an unwanted child Francois was sent to live with his grandparents When his grandmother died his parents took him in much to his mother s dismay His experiences with his mother were harsh He recalled being treated badly by her but found comfort in his father s laughter and spirit Francois had a very depressing childhood after moving in with his parents They left him alone when they took vacations He even recalled being alone during Christmas Being left alone forced Francois into independence often doing various tasks around the house to improve it such as painting or changing the electric outlets Sadly these kind gestures often resulted in catastrophic events causing him to get scolded by his mother His father mostly laughed them off The 400 Blows marked the beginning of the French New Wave movement which gave directors such as Jean Luc Godard Claude Chabrol and Jacques Rivette a wider audience The New Wave dealt with a self conscious rejection of traditional cinema structure This was a topic on which Truffaut had been writing for years Shoot the Piano Player Edit Truffaut and actress Francoise Dorleac during a visit to Israel 1963 Following the success of The 400 Blows Truffaut featured disjunctive editing and seemingly random voiceovers in his next film Shoot the Piano Player 1960 starring Charles Aznavour Truffaut has said that in the middle of filming he realized that he hated gangsters But since gangsters were a main part of the story he toned up the comical aspect of the characters and made the movie more to his liking Even though Shoot the Piano Player was much appreciated by critics it performed poorly at the box office While the film focused on two of the French New Wave s favourite elements American film noir and themselves Truffaut never again experimented as heavily Jules and Jim and The Soft Skin Edit Truffaut during his visit to Helsinki Finland on 21 December 1964 In 1962 Truffaut directed his third movie Jules and Jim a romantic drama starring Jeanne Moreau The film was very popular and highly influential In 1963 Truffaut was approached to direct the American film Bonnie and Clyde with a treatment written by Esquire journalists David Newman and Robert Benton intended to introduce the French New Wave to Hollywood Although he was interested enough to help in script development Truffaut ultimately declined but not before interesting Jean Luc Godard and American actor and would be producer Warren Beatty who proceeded with the film with director Arthur Penn The fourth movie Truffaut directed was The Soft Skin 1964 It was not acclaimed on its release Fahrenheit 451 Edit Truffaut s first non French film was a 1966 adaptation of Ray Bradbury s classic science fiction novel Fahrenheit 451 showcasing Truffaut s love of books His only English speaking film made on location in England was a great challenge for Truffaut because he barely spoke English himself Shot by cinematographer Nicolas Roeg this was Truffaut s first film in colour The larger scale production was difficult for Truffaut who had worked only with small crews and budgets The shoot was also strained by a conflict with lead actor Oscar Werner who was unhappy with his character and stormed off set leaving Truffaut to shoot scenes using a body double shot from behind The film was a commercial failure and Truffaut never worked outside France again The film s cult standing has steadily grown although some critics remain dubious of it as an adaptation 11 A 2014 consideration of the film by Charles Silver praises it 12 Truffaut and Claude Jade at the premiere of Love on the Run in Luxembourg April 1979 Thrillers and Stolen Kisses Edit Stolen Kisses 1968 was a continuation of the Antoine Doinel Cycle starring Claude Jade as Antoine s fiancee and later wife Christine Darbon During its filming Truffaut fell in love with Jade and was briefly engaged to her It was a big hit on the international art circuit A short time later Jade made her Hollywood debut in Hitchcock s Topaz 13 Truffaut worked on projects with varied subjects The Bride Wore Black 1968 a brutal tale of revenge is a stylish homage to the films of Alfred Hitchcock once again starring Moreau Mississippi Mermaid 1969 with Catherine Deneuve and Jean Paul Belmondo is an identity bending romantic thriller Both films are based on novels by Cornell Woolrich The Wild Child 1970 included Truffaut s acting debut in the lead role of 18th century physician Jean Marc Gaspard Itard Doinel marries Christine Edit Bed and Board 1970 was another Antoine Doinel film also with Jade now Leaud s on screen wife Two English Girls 1971 is the female reflection of the same love story as Jules et Jim It is based on a story by Henri Pierre Roche who wrote Jules and Jim about a man who falls equally in love with two sisters and their love affair over a period of years Such a Gorgeous Kid Like Me 1972 was a screwball comedy that was not well received Day for Night Edit Day for Night won Truffaut a Best Foreign Film Oscar 14 The film is probably his most reflective work It is the story of a film crew trying to finish a film while dealing with the personal and professional problems that accompany making a movie Truffaut plays the director of the fictional film being made This film features scenes from his previous films It is considered his best film since his earliest work Time magazine placed it on its list of 100 Best Films of the Century along with The 400 Blows In 1975 Truffaut gained more notoriety with The Story of Adele H Isabelle Adjani in the title role earned a nomination for an Academy Award for Best Actress His 1976 film Small Change was nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film The late 1970s and the last Doinel Edit The Man Who Loved Women 1977 a romantic drama was a minor hit Truffaut also appeared in Steven Spielberg s 1977 Close Encounters of the Third Kind as scientist Claude Lacombe 15 The Green Room 1978 starred Truffaut in the lead It was a box office flop so he made Love on the Run 1979 starring Leaud and Jade as the final movie of the Doinel Cycle The Last Metro Edit One of Truffaut s final films gave him an international revival The Last Metro 1980 garnered 12 Cesar Award nominations and 10 wins including Best Director Final films and legacy Edit Truffaut s last film was shot in black and white giving his career a sense of having bookends Confidentially Yours is Truffaut s tribute to his favourite director Hitchcock It deals with numerous Hitchcockian themes such as private guilt versus public innocence a woman investigating a murder and anonymous locations A keen reader Truffaut adapted many literary works including two novels by Henri Pierre Roche Ray Bradbury s Fahrenheit 451 Henry James s The Altar of the Dead filmed as The Green Room and several American detective novels Truffaut s other films were from original screenplays often co written by the screenwriters Suzanne Schiffman or Jean Gruault They featured diverse subjects the sombre The Story of Adele H inspired by the life of the daughter of Victor Hugo with Isabelle Adjani Day for Night shot at the Victorine Studios depicting the ups and downs of filmmaking and The Last Metro set during the German occupation of France during World War II a film rewarded by ten Cesar Awards Known as a lifelong cinephile Truffaut once according to the 1993 documentary film Francois Truffaut Stolen Portraits threw a hitchhiker out of his car after learning that he didn t like films Many filmmakers admire Truffaut and tributes to his work have appeared in films such as Almost Famous Face and The Diving Bell and the Butterfly as well as novelist Haruki Murakami s Kafka on the Shore In conversation with Michael Ondaatje film editor Walter Murch mentions the influence Truffaut had on him as a young man saying he was electrified by the freeze frame at the end of The 400 Blows and that Godard s Breathless and Truffaut s Shoot the Piano Player reinforced the idea that he could make films 16 Roger Ebert included The 400 Blows in his canon of Great Movies and concludes one of his most curious haunting films is The Green Room 1978 based on the Henry James story The Altar of the Dead about a man and a woman who share a passion for remembering their dead loved ones Jonathan Rosenbaum who thinks The Green Room may be Truffaut s best film told me he thinks of it as the director s homage to the auteur theory That theory created by Bazin and his disciples Truffaut Godard Resnais Chabrol Rohmer Malle declared that the director was the true author of a film not the studio the screenwriter the star the genre If the figures in the green room stand for the great directors of the past perhaps there is a shrine there now to Truffaut One likes to think of the ghost of Antoine Doinel lighting a candle before it 17 Commentary of other filmmakers EditTruffaut expressed his admiration for filmmakers such as Luis Bunuel Ingmar Bergman Robert Bresson Roberto Rossellini and Alfred Hitchcock He wrote Hitchcock Truffaut a book about Hitchcock based on a lengthy series of interviews 18 Of Jean Renoir he said I think Renoir is the only filmmaker who s practically infallible who has never made a mistake on film And I think if he never made mistakes it s because he always found solutions based on simplicity human solutions He s one film director who never pretended He never tried to have a style and if you know his work which is very comprehensive since he dealt with all sorts of subjects when you get stuck especially as a young filmmaker you can think of how Renoir would have handled the situation and you generally find a solution 19 Truffaut called German filmmaker Werner Herzog the most important film director alive 20 Truffaut and Jean Luc Godard his colleague from Les Cahiers du Cinema worked together closely during their start as film directors although they had different working methods Tensions came to the surface after May 68 Godard wanted a more political specifically Marxist cinema Truffaut was critical of creating films for primarily political purposes 21 In 1973 Godard wrote Truffaut a lengthy and raucous private letter peppered with accusations and insinuations several times stating that as a filmmaker you re a liar and that his latest film Day for Night had been unsatisfying lying and evasive You re a liar because the scene between you and Jacqueline Bisset last week at Francis a Paris restaurant isn t included in your movie and one also can t help wondering why the director is the only guy who isn t sleeping around in Day for Night Truffaut directed the film wrote it and played the director on the film set in the film Godard also implied that Truffaut had gone commercial and easy 22 Truffaut replied with an angry 20 page letter in which he accused Godard of being a radical chic hypocrite a man who believed everyone to be equal in theory only The Ursula Andress of militancy like Brando a piece of shit on a pedestal Godard later tried to reconcile with Truffaut but they never spoke to or saw each other again 23 After Truffaut s death Godard wrote the introduction to a generous selection of his correspondence and included his own 1973 letter He also offered a long tribute in his film Histoire s du cinema 24 Personal life EditTruffaut was married to Madeleine Morgenstern from 1957 to 1965 and they had two daughters Laura born 1959 and Eva born 1961 Madeleine was the daughter of Ignace Morgenstern managing director of one of France s largest film distribution companies Cocinor and was largely responsible for securing funding for Truffaut s first films In 1968 Truffaut was engaged to actress Claude Jade Stolen Kisses Bed and Board Love on the Run he and Fanny Ardant The Woman Next Door Confidentially Yours lived together from 1981 to 1984 and had a daughter Josephine Truffaut born 28 September 1983 4 25 Truffaut was an atheist but had great respect for the Catholic Church and requested a Requiem Mass for his funeral 26 27 Death Edit Truffaut s grave in Montmartre Cemetery Paris In July 1983 following his first stroke and being diagnosed with a brain tumour 28 Truffaut rented France Gall s and Michel Berger s house outside Honfleur Normandy He was expected to attend his friend Milos Forman s Amadeus premiere 29 when he died on 21 October 1984 aged 52 at the American Hospital of Paris in Neuilly sur Seine in France 30 At the time of his death he had numerous films in preparation He had intended to make 30 films and then retire to write books for the remainder of his life He was five films short of that aim He is buried in Montmartre Cemetery 31 Filmography EditDirector Edit Feature films Edit Year English Title Original title Notes1959 The 400 Blows Les Quatre Cents Coups Antoine Doinel seriesCannes Film Festival Best DirectorNominated Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay 32 Nominated Cannes Film Festival Palme d Or1960 Shoot the Piano Player Tirez sur le pianiste1962 Jules and Jim Jules et Jim Mar del Plata International Film Festival Best DirectorNominated Mar del Plata International Film Festival Best Film1964 The Soft Skin La Peau douce Nominated Cannes Film Festival Palme d Or1966 Fahrenheit 451 Fahrenheit 451 Filmed in EnglishNominated Venice Film Festival Golden Lion1968 The Bride Wore Black La Mariee etait en noir1968 Stolen Kisses Baisers voles Antoine Doinel seriesNominated Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film 33 1969 Mississippi Mermaid La sirene du Mississippi1970 The Wild Child L Enfant sauvage1970 Bed and Board Domicile conjugal Antoine Doinel series1971 Two English Girls Les Deux anglaises et le continent1972 Such a Gorgeous Kid Like Me Une belle fille comme moi1973 Day for Night La Nuit americaine Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film 14 BAFTA Award for Best FilmBAFTA Award for Best DirectionNominated Academy Award for Best DirectorNominated Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay 14 1975 The Story of Adele H L Histoire d Adele H Nominated Cesar Award for Best Director1976 Small Change L Argent de poche Nominated Berlin International Film Festival Golden Bear 34 1977 The Man Who Loved Women L Homme qui aimait les femmes Nominated Berlin International Film Festival Golden Bear 35 1978 The Green Room La Chambre verte1979 Love on the Run L Amour en fuite Antoine Doinel seriesNominated Berlin International Film Festival Golden Bear 36 1980 The Last Metro Le Dernier metro Cesar Award for Best FilmCesar Award for Best DirectorCesar Award for Best WritingNominated Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film 37 1981 The Woman Next Door La Femme d a cote1983 Confidentially Yours Vivement dimanche Nominated Cesar Award for Best DirectorShorts films and collaborations Edit Year Title Original title Notes1955 A Visit Une Visite1957 The Mischief Makers Les Mistons1958 A Story of Water Une Histoire d eau Co directed with Jean Luc Godard1961 The Army Game Tire au flanc 62 Directed by Claude de Givray Truffaut credited as co director1962 Antoine and Colette Antoine et Colette Antoine Doinel series segment from Love at TwentyScreenwriter only Edit Year Title Original title Notes1960 Breathless A bout de souffle Directed by Jean Luc Godard1988 The Little Thief La Petite voleuse Directed by Claude Miller released posthumously1995 Belle Epoque miniseries Wikidata Belle Epoque Miniseries with Jean Gruault directed by Gavin Millar released posthumouslyActor Edit Year Title Role Notes1956 Le Coup du berger Party guest Uncredited Directed by Jacques Rivette1956 La sonate a Kreutzer1959 The 400 Blows Man in Funfair Uncredited1963 A tout prendre Himself Uncredited1964 The Soft Skin Petrol pump attendant Voice Uncredited1970 The Wild Child Dr Jean Itard Lead role1970 Bed amp Board Newspaper vendor Voice Uncredited1971 Two English Girls Recitant Narrator Voice Uncredited1972 Such a Gorgeous Kid Like Me Un journaliste Voice Uncredited1973 Day for Night Ferrand the film director Lead role1975 The Story of Adele H Officer Uncredited1976 Small Change Martine s Father Uncredited1977 The Man Who Loved Women Man at Funeral Uncredited1977 Close Encounters of the Third Kind Claude Lacombe Directed by Steven SpielbergNominated BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role1978 The Green Room Julien Davenne Lead role1981 The Woman Next Door Cameo UncreditedProducer only Edit Year Title Original title Notes1958 Good Anna Anna your mam Directed by Harry Kumel1960 Testament of Orpheus Le testament d Orphee Directed by Jean Cocteau1961 The Gold Bug Le scarabee d or Directed by Robert Lachenay1961 Paris Belongs to Us Paris nous appartient Directed by Jacques Rivette1968 Naked Childhood L Enfance Nue Directed by Maurice PialatBibliography EditLes 400 Coups 1960 with M Moussy English translation The 400 Blows Le Cinema selon Alfred Hitchcock 1967 second edition 1983 English translation Hitchcock and Hitchcock Truffaut with the collaboration of Helen G Scott Les Aventures d Antoine Doinel 1970 English translation Adventures of Antoine Doinel translated by Helen G Scott Jules et Jim film script 1971 English translation Jules and Jim translated by Nicholas Fry La Nuit americaine et le Journal de Fahrenheit 451 1974 Le Plaisir des yeux 1975 L Argent de poche 1976 English title Small Change A Film Novel translated by Anselm Hollo L Homme qui aimait les femmes 1977 Les Films de ma vie 1981 English translation The Films in My Life translated by Leonard Mayhew Correspondance 1988 English translation Correspondence 1945 1984 translated by Gilbert Adair released posthumously Le Cinema selon Francois Truffaut 1988 edited by Anne Gillain released posthumously Belle epoque 1996 with Jean Gruault released posthumously See also EditFrancois Truffaut Award Paris Belongs to Us Two in the Wave a 2010 documentary film about Truffaut s relationship with Jean Luc Godard La Cinematheque Francaise will offer a full retrospective and an exhibition of Francois Truffaut s work 38 in 2014 2015References Edit Wells John C 2008 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 3rd ed Longman ISBN 978 1 4058 8118 0 Jones Daniel 2011 Roach Peter Setter Jane Esling John eds Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary 18th ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 15255 6 Obituary Variety 24 October 1984 a b c Francois Truffaut French New Wave Director Newwavefilm com Retrieved 6 February 2012 Robert Ingram Paul Duncan 2004 Francois Truffaut Film Author 1932 1983 Taschen p 94 ISBN 978 3 8228 2260 9 a b Francois Truffaut Movie and Film Biography and Filmography Allmovie com 21 October 1984 Retrieved 6 February 2012 Francois Truffaut at the Cinematheque Francaise Exhibition Review The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved 31 January 2017 Truffaut Francois 1989 Correspondence 1945 1984 New York Farrar Straus and Giroux pp 17 50 57 Sukhdev Sandhu 2 April 2009 Film as an act of love New Statesman The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica 20 July 1998 Auteur theory Filmmaking Encyclopedia Britannica John Brosnan and Peter Nicholls Fahrenheit 451 Encyclopedia of Science Fiction Retrieved 13 September 2019 Charles Silver Francois Truffaut s Fahrenheit 451 Inside Out MoMA Retrieved 13 September 2019 Tino Balio United Artists The Company That Changed the Film Industry University of Wisconsin Press 1987 p 282 a b c The 47th Academy Awards 1975 Nominees and Winners oscars org Retrieved 10 January 2012 Aurelien Ferenczi 26 October 2014 Qu allait donc faire Truffaut chez Spielberg Telerama Ondaatje Michael 2002 The Conversations Walter Murch and the Editing of Film pp 24 25 Ebert Roger 8 August 1999 The 400 Blows Chicago Sun Times Francois Truffaut Hitchcock Goodreads Retrieved 14 March 2016 On Jean Renoir Truffaut s Last Interview Cronin Paul Werner Herzog 2002 Herzog on Herzog London Faber and Faber pp vii viii ISBN 978 0 571 20708 4 truffaut When Truffaut met Godard Financial Times Archived from the original on 10 December 2022 Truffaut Correspondance ed Godard Gleiberman Owen Godard and Truffaut Their spiky complex friendship is its own great story in Two in the Wave de Baecque Antione Toubiana Serge 2000 Truffaut A Biography University of California Press ISBN 0520225244 Eric Pace 22 October 1984 Francois Truffaut New Wave Director Dies The New York Times Retrieved 1 May 2013 Mr Truffaut s 1957 marriage to Madeleine Morgenstern ended in divorce He is survived by two adult daughters from that marriage Laura Truffaut Wong of San Francisco and Eva Truffaut of Paris and by a 13 month old daughter Josephine Eric Michael Mazur 2011 Encyclopedia of Religion and Film ABC CLIO p 438 ISBN 9780313330728 Yet Truffaut an atheist was not stumping for God with these conservative attacks David Sterritt 1999 The Films of Jean Luc Godard Seeing the Invisible Cambridge University Press p 17 ISBN 9780521589710 One way of understanding Godard s approach is to contrast it with that of Francois Truffaut one of his most respected New Wave colleagues As a self described atheist Truffaut took special pleasure in the materiality of cinema noting that no photographic image can be obtained without real physical light making direct contact with a real physical object in the immediate presence of the camera Antoine de Baecque and Serge Toubiana s Biography of Francois Truffaut Truffaut un classique 1970 80 francetv fr Retrieved 14 March 2016 Francois Truffaut New Wave Director Dies The New York Times 22 October 1984 Retrieved 26 May 2011 Francois Truffaut the exuberant film director whose depictions of children women and romantic obsessions helped make him a leader of the New Wave group of French movie makers died yesterday He was 52 years old Mr Truffaut died at the American Hospital in Neuilly sur Seine a Paris suburb a hospital spokesman said He had been hospitalized about 10 days ago for treatment of cancer Journees du patrimoine 2011 Paris 18eme le programme Le Figaro 14 September 2011 Retrieved 29 December 2016 The 32nd Academy Awards 1960 Nominees and Winners oscars org Retrieved 15 November 2011 The 41st Academy Awards 1969 Nominees and Winners oscars org Retrieved 15 November 2011 IMDB com Awards for Small Change imdb com Retrieved 16 July 2010 IMDB com Awards for The Man Who Loved Women imdb com Retrieved 25 July 2010 IMDB com Awards for Love on the Run imdb com Retrieved 14 August 2010 The 53rd Academy Awards 1981 Nominees and Winners oscars org Retrieved 8 June 2013 Francois Truffaut l exposition Archived from the original on 31 August 2014 Retrieved 29 June 2014 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Francois Truffaut Francois Truffaut at IMDb New Wave Film Encyclopedia Francois Truffaut an extensive biography Francois Truffaut complete biography Francois Truffaut Archived 26 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Francois Truffaut bibliography via the UC Berkeley Media Resources Center Francois Truffaut at The Guardian Film Francois Truffaut at The New York Times Movies Francois Truffaut collected news and commentary at The New York Times Works by or about Francois Truffaut in libraries WorldCat catalog Legendary interview with Truffaut from 1970 AllMovie com Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Francois Truffaut amp oldid 1142345579, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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