Le
Réalisateur
Une
visite (1955)
Les
Mistons (1957)
Les
Quatre cents coups (1959)
Tirez
sur le pianiste (1960)
Une
histoire d'eau (1961)
Tire-au-flanc
(1962)
Jules
et Jim (1962)
Antoine
et Colette (1962)
La
Peau douce (1964)
Fahrenheit
451 (1966)
La
Mariée était en noir (1967)
Baisers
volés (1968)
La
Sirène du Mississippi (1969)
L'Enfant
sauvage (1969)
Domicile
conjugal (1970)
Les
Deux anglaises et le continent (1971)
Une
belle fille comme moi (1972)
La
Nuit américaine (1973)
L'Histoire
d'Adèle H (1975)
L'Argent
de poche (1976)
L'Homme
qui aimait les femmes (1977)
La
Chambre verte (1978)
L'Amour
en fuite (1979)
Le
Dernier métro (1980)
La
Femme d'à côté (1981)
Vivement
dimanche! (1983)
L'Acteur
Les
Quatre cents coups (1959)
Tire
au flanc (1961)
L'Enfant
sauvage (1969)
Les
Deux anglaises et le continent (1971) (voix)
La
Nuit américaine (1973)
L'Histoire
d'Adèle H (1975)
L'Argent
de poche (1976)
L'Homme
qui aimait les femmes (1977)
Close Encounters of the
Third Kind (1977)
La
Chambre verte (1978)

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François Truffaut
was born outside of wedlock on the 6th February 1932. He never met
his real father and was brought up by a mother, Janine (who resented him)
and her husband, Truffaut’s adoptive father, Roland Truffaut. In
a difficult and rebellious childhood, he sought escape in reading avidly
and frequent trips to the cinema. His passion for films led him to
found a cinema club when he was 16, but that resulted in debt, trouble
with the police, and alienation from his parents. A few years later,
during his military service, he deserted and spent some time in a military
prison in Germany.
With the support of the critic
André Bazin, François Truffaut's luck changed for the better.
In the 1950s he began a career as a successful, if controversial, film
critic for Les Cahiers du cinéma. In an article entitled
"Une certaine tendance du cinéma français", published
in January 1954, Truffaut launched a fierce attack on the old guard of
French cinema, as represented by the likes of Jean Delannoy and Claude
Autant-Lara. This helped to precipitate a major upheaval in
the French film industry, coinciding with the arrival of a new tranch of
talented young film makers who were eager to make their mark. This
"new wave" (nouvelle vague) of film directors gave its name to the
exciting and innovative years of French cinema which followed. Truffaut
himself, along with the friends he made whilst working for Les Cahiers
du cinéma (Jean-Luc Godard, Claude Chabrol, Eric Rohmer)
would play a pivotal role in the French New Wave.
Truffaut made two short films
before making his first full-length film, Les
Quatre Cents Coups, in 1959. This film was a poignant semi-autobiographical
work in which Truffaut drew on his own troubled experiences as a young
teenager. It was the first instalment in a series of five films which
Truffaut made over the next twenty years featuring Truffaut's alter-ego,
Antoine Doinel, played by the delightful Jean-Pierre Léaud.
Although made on a very small
budget, Les Quatre Cents Coups proved to be a popular success.
The film earned Truffaut the Best Director prize at the Cannes Film Festival
in 1959 and established him as a serious film director. Flush with
this success, Truffaut indulged his passion for American crime-thriller
in his next film, Tirez
sur le pianiste. Although now regarded as a masterpiece,
the film was a commercial disaster when it was released in 1960 and this
badly damaged Truffaut's confidence.
Realising that if he were
to succeed as a film director he had to make films which would appeal to
the public, Truffaut was very careful in choosing the subject for his next
film. He had long considered making a film adaptation of a novel
by Henri-Pierre Roché entitled Jules et
Jim and now, with two films under his belt, he felt up to the challenge.
The film would be Truffaut's greatest film, a heartrending portrait of
friendship and love involving two friends and their shared lover, with
a stunning performance from Jeanne Moreau. Jules
et Jim proved to be an international success and marked the high-point
in Truffaut's career.
Truffaut's next film, La
Peau Douce, was another romantic drama involving an ill-fated love
triangle, but was far less successful than Jules et Jim. Over
the next few years, Truffaut’s career slowed as he laboured on his biography
of his hero, Alfred Hitchcock whilst struggling to get his film adaptation
of Farenheit 451 off the
ground. Science fiction, like American pulp fiction, was a genre
which greatly appealed to Truffaut, although his experiences with Farenheit
451 put him off making a second science-fiction film.
After another fairly ill-received
thriller, La Mariée
était en noir, Truffaut regained his former popularity with
the third episode in his Antoine Doinel series,
Baisers
volés. This film, an enchanting romantic comedy starring
Jean-Pierre Léaud and Claude Jade, was a great success, not just
in France, but abroad, most notably in the United States. Ironically,
Truffaut was, at the time, distracted by the turbulent political events
of 1968 (in particular, lending his support to the campaign to get Henri
Langois re-instated as the director of the Cinémathèque
Française).
For his next film, La
Sirène du Mississippi, another American-style thriller,
Truffaut worked with two of France's leading actors, Jean-Paul Belmondo
and Catherine Deneuve. Despite such star billing, the film was a
flop. The next few years saw a rich diversity in Truffaut's
work, including the poignant historical drama
L'Enfant
sauvage (1969), the next Antoine Doinel outing Domicile
Conjugale (1970) and an ambitious adaptation of Henri-Pierre
Roché's second novel Les
Deux anglaises et le continent (1971). In Une
belle fille comme moi (1972), Truffaut made his one and only black
comedy, a bizarre mix of thriller and comedy featuring a stunning performance
from Bernadette Lafont, an actress favoured by the New Wave directors.
In 1973, Truffaut won the
Best Foreign Film Oscar for La
Nuit américaine, a frantic comedy about film-making, in
which Truffaut (by this stage an accomplished actor) also starred.
This was followed by another ambitious historical drama starring Isabelle
Adjani, L'Histoire d'Adèle
H (1975) and then a compelling study of young children, L'Argent
de poche (1976).
Truffaut's next film, an
unusual portrait of a man obsessed with women, L'Homme
qui aimait les femmes (1977) scored another popular success.
The film reflected Truffaut's own complicated love life, which was strewn
with short-lived but intensely passionate romances, often with the female
leads of his films (including Jeanne Moreau, Françoise Dorléac,
Catherine Deneuve, Isabelle Adjani, amongst others).
La
Chambre verte (1978)
was, consciously or unconsciously, a tribute to those cherished friends
whom Truffaut had lost in recent years. It is a sombre and
intense work, but was not a great commercial success. His next film
was a total contrast, L'Amour
en fuite (1979) being the last instalment in the Antoine Doinel
series. Despite being partly a compilation of Truffaut's earlier
films, this film was a success, although the director was far from satisfied
with the end result.
Truffaut's next film, Le
Dernier métro (1980), was to be his last critical and box
office success. A wartime drama set in a theatre, and starring Catherine
Deneuve and Gérard Depardieu, the film swept the board at the 1980s
César Award Ceremony, winning no less than ten awards, in categories
which included best film, best director, best actor, best actress, best
cinematography and best screenplay.
Truffaut worked with Gérard
Depardieu for a second time on his next film La
Femme d'à côté (1981), a strikingly black portrait
of obsessive love. The film starred Fanny Ardant who would become
Truffaut's partner, bearing him his third child. The actress also
starred in Truffaut's final film, Vivement
dimanche! (1983), a comedy thriller in which the director's
admiration for Hitchcock is more than noticeable.
As well as a director, François
Truffaut was also a creditable actor, appearing in some of his own films
(most notably in L’Enfant sauvage). He also starred in Spielberg’s
1977 film, Close Encounters of the Third Kind.
Shortly after completing
his final film, Vivement dimanche!, Truffaut was diagnosed as having
a brain tumour in 1983 and, after a slow decline, died in an American hospital
at Neuilly in France on 21 October 1984, at the age of 52.
The range of subjects in
François Truffaut's oeuvre is large, encompassing noirish thriller,
romantic comedy, tragic romance, science-fiction, portraits of adolescence
and period drama. The two things which unify this great diversity
of subject matter and makes Truffaut's works a coherent whole are a consistent
humanity and their auto-biographical content. Truffaut had at least
three great passions in his life: women, cinema and American pulp fiction.
These passions were such a big part of his life that it is no surprise
they should be so keenly reflected in his films. Truffaut was also
a great humanist, who supported many worthy causes for children, and this
humanity is also an essential element of his films.
Despite his premature death,
François Truffaut made an enormous impact on cinema and his films
have an enduring popular appeal. Most significantly, he did a great
deal to promote the idea of the director as an auteur, making him
the inspiration for future generations of independent film-makers.
© James Travers 2002
Version française
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