Truffaut on Cinema

Between 1959 and 1984, French film director François Truffaut was interviewed over three hundred times. Each interview offers critical insight into the genesis of Truffaut’s films as he shares the sources of his inspiration, the choice of his themes, and the development of his screenplays. In addition, Truffaut discusses his relationships with collaborators, actors, and the circumstances surrounding the shooting of each film. These texts, originally assembled by Anne Gillain and published in French in 1988, are presented here in a montage arranged chronologically by film. This compilation includes an impressive array of reflections on cinema as an art form. Truffaut defines the aims and practices of the French New Wave, comparing their efforts to the films made by their predecessors and including comments that encompass the entire history of cinema. Truffaut on Cinema provides commentary on contemporary events, a wealth of biographical information, and Truffaut’s own artistic itinerary.

1124320713
Truffaut on Cinema

Between 1959 and 1984, French film director François Truffaut was interviewed over three hundred times. Each interview offers critical insight into the genesis of Truffaut’s films as he shares the sources of his inspiration, the choice of his themes, and the development of his screenplays. In addition, Truffaut discusses his relationships with collaborators, actors, and the circumstances surrounding the shooting of each film. These texts, originally assembled by Anne Gillain and published in French in 1988, are presented here in a montage arranged chronologically by film. This compilation includes an impressive array of reflections on cinema as an art form. Truffaut defines the aims and practices of the French New Wave, comparing their efforts to the films made by their predecessors and including comments that encompass the entire history of cinema. Truffaut on Cinema provides commentary on contemporary events, a wealth of biographical information, and Truffaut’s own artistic itinerary.

2.99 In Stock
Truffaut on Cinema

Truffaut on Cinema

Truffaut on Cinema

Truffaut on Cinema

eBook

$2.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

Between 1959 and 1984, French film director François Truffaut was interviewed over three hundred times. Each interview offers critical insight into the genesis of Truffaut’s films as he shares the sources of his inspiration, the choice of his themes, and the development of his screenplays. In addition, Truffaut discusses his relationships with collaborators, actors, and the circumstances surrounding the shooting of each film. These texts, originally assembled by Anne Gillain and published in French in 1988, are presented here in a montage arranged chronologically by film. This compilation includes an impressive array of reflections on cinema as an art form. Truffaut defines the aims and practices of the French New Wave, comparing their efforts to the films made by their predecessors and including comments that encompass the entire history of cinema. Truffaut on Cinema provides commentary on contemporary events, a wealth of biographical information, and Truffaut’s own artistic itinerary.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780253026569
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Publication date: 12/22/2021
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 397
File size: 693 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Anne Gillain is Professor Emerita at Wellesley College. She is author of François Truffaut: The Lost Secret and is editor (with Dudley Andrew) of A Companion to François Truffaut.

Alistair Fox is Professor Emeritus of English at the University of Otago. He is author of Speaking Pictures: Neuropsychoanalysis and Authorship in Film and Literature, and Jane Campion: Authorship and Personal Cinema, and is translator of François Truffaut: The Lost Secret.

Read an Excerpt

Truffaut On Cinema


By Anne Gillain, Alistair Fox

Indiana University Press

Copyright © 1988 Editions Flammarion, Paris
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-253-02575-3



CHAPTER 1

CHILDHOOD

A man is formed between seven and sixteen years old; after that, for his whole life, he will live out whatever he has acquired between these two ages.

Interview with Luce Sand, Jeune cinéma, May 31, 1968


Did you really have an unhappy childhood?

No. It was just like that of Antoine in The 400 Blows. The film was not at all exaggerated. In fact, I have a feeling I left out things that might have struck people as unrealistic. What I do regret is not having shown how closely associated my story was with the years immediately following the War. But, it was my first film — I wasn't yet capable of making a period film. I still have a film to make that will go back to that time, one about a boy under the Occupation. It wouldn't deal with the Resistance, only the more mundane aspects of life at that time ... I have to say that the fact of having grown up during the Occupation gave me a terrible view of adults.


When were you born? What did your parents do?

My father was a young designer-architect who was especially keen on mountain climbing, along with my mother, who was a secretary at the weekly magazine L'Illustration, rue Saint-Georges, where my grandfather Jean de Monferrand worked — also a mountain climber and an official in the French Alpine Club. They were regarded as real eccentrics in the quarter, because they would leave in shorts with a backpack every Saturday morning, arriving back on Sunday night. There are people like that whom it is impossible to label ...

I was born in Paris, very near Place Pigalle, on the sixth of February, 1932, being immediately handed over to a nurse, then raised until I was eight years old by my grandmother. When my grandmother died, my parents took me back. They were not mean — only highly strung and preoccupied. My mother was embittered. Undoubtedly, she would have loved to have a more dazzling life. I was not sporty; very quickly it was cinema that attracted me. Not to love camping was considered a dubious business in the household.


Do you remember your first experience of cinema?

I don't have a very good memory of the first film I saw, probably in 1938 or 1939, because of the incompetence of the "permanent" employee in the theater. My aunt took me to the cinema, and we went into the film while a marriage scene was being shown on the screen. Two hours later, the same scene was played again, and my aunt said, "This is the scene that was playing when we arrived," and we left.

This makes me think of a story, the one about the little girl who saw Joan of Arc at the cinema, and, when describing the story later, said, "It's about a lady who is put in the fire and then becomes a shepherdess."

My first clear memory of a film was of Four Flights to Love by Abel Gance, with Micheline Presle and Fernand Gravey, in 1939 or 1940. It is a film that made everyone in the theater cry, because of parallels between the periods. It was a film about the war of 1914–1918, and the theaters were full of soldiers on leave, men who were going to leave for the war, or were returning from it, so things were really crazy, I think, throughout the whole of France. I heard my mother weeping by my side; my father had just been mobilized. As for myself, I didn't cry, probably because I didn't understand what was going on very well, but I was bowled over; my only fear was that the film would end.

I have often rewatched Four Flights to Love since, and each time I do weep, because it is a really irresistible, brilliant melodrama.

Although they weren't cinephiles, my parents were keen on entertainments, and discussed important plays and films between themselves. That guided and directed my taste. They took me to see certain films, but I very quickly adopted the habit of secretly going to see ones to which they didn't take me. When my parents went out together at night, I myself would also leave, ten minutes after them, to go to the cinema, generally at the closest theater. I didn't enjoy these evenings as much as I might have, because my anxiety about getting caught, and of getting home after them, was too great. The second half of the film was spoiled, to the extent that fear would make me leave before the movie had finished, because I had to be in bed when my parents came back. I still retain a great degree of anxiety from this period, and films are associated with anxiety for me, with the idea of secrecy. And so I found it more convenient to go to the cinema in the afternoon, skipping class.


What school did you go to?

Up until 1941 I was at the Lycée Rollin. I failed the examination to enter into the sixth grade. And so my parents decided to put me back into primary school.

At primary school, there was no one else who had come from a high school. I was somewhat of a misfit. At high school, no one played hooky. Here, it was an everyday occurrence. I began by behaving well like everyone else, and then I played up. The more I was punished, the more unruly I was. So I was expelled quite often. I went from school to school. I was taught in the local school in rue Choron, then at rue de la Victoire, then at rue Hippolyte-Lebas, then at the École commerciale in avenue Trudaine — you can see the kind of pupil I was! I played hooky in the company of my friend Robert Lachenay. When one of us was made to go back to a particular school, the other would arrange to follow shortly after, so that we were always attending the same one. I don't know how it happened, but I ended up being placed in classes that were less and less advanced. On one occasion, I found myself in a class I had already taken three years earlier in another school. I attended for some days at the end of the month for compositions. I remember that at one time, we were away so much, Robert Lachenay and I, that we trumped up fake school reports written with India ink on paper folders, which we made our parents sign.


What money did you use to go to the cinema?

When my "pocket money" for the week ran out, I used the money meant for the school canteen, but I also have to admit that I frequented many theaters where it was possible to enter without paying.


How did you do that?

I had a different method for each cinema. At the Delta it required two of us to go: one of us would pay and then let the other in (that was always done through the toilets). At the Images, we had a different strategy, because the lavatories were in the hall, in the basement; we had to go down the stairs and, when we did, we would always find an old ticket in the toilets, on the floor. Then, all we had to do was sling our jackets over our shoulder to make it look as if we had come out of the theater, have this old ticket to show, and then choose a moment in the intermission, and that worked. Even at the Gaumont-Palace, it was possible to get in, but at the peak time, on Sunday afternoon, at the moment when members of the audience were coming out, because of the immense doors, and the four thousand people who were exiting. It involved pretending to be someone who had forgotten something, and moving back through this flood of people. That was also possible.

At that time there were two cinemas facing each other across the boulevard des Italiens: the New York and the Cinéac-Italiens. Both started up at ten o'clock in the morning. Their patrons consisted almost entirely of school kids and high school students. And we could not all come with our satchels because that would have looked funny. Every morning there would be a group of fifty or sixty children there. They would be waiting, and the first cinema that opened would get all the clientele, because everyone was anxious to get out of sight, because we felt very guilty.


What films do you still remember?

The films that I really admired, obviously, were French films, given that I started to go to the cinema during the War. Films like Le Corbeau: The Raven, and Les Visiteurs du Soir. Very soon, I had seen them several times. At the beginning, that was an accident, as I had seen them secretly without my parents' knowing; then my parents would say, "Come, let's go to the cinema," and I would be taken to see a film again without being able to say that I had already seen it! But that gave me a taste for seeing a film several times.

The best film of the Occupation — and the one that was most talked about — was Le Corbeau. Les Visiteurs du Soir provoked arguments at school: there were all those who were critical of the castle, and all those who defended the white castle. But yes, that was all we talked about, even the teacher. He would say, "The castle had to be new at one moment or another, and so it is intelligent to have built a white castle." There was a strong vein of fantasy in French cinema. At that time I loved any film coming out that was a little bit crazy. In those days I placed quality things on the same level as things that were definitely less good, like La Fiancée des ténèbres. I adored that. It was very strange — with Jany Holt ... Also The Phantom Baron ... I remember one film I saw ... I was just a kid, it was at Montauban, it was called Pontcarral, do you remember it? At any rate, I was a subversive spectator. Supporting the director, against the audience. Always. Even in the case of films that were being ridiculed, films that people were sniggering at. I was all for the ridiculous, for audacity, cheek ... Lyricism, always, always lyricism.


And what did this revolt come from? From your reading? From your temperament?

I think it came from watching films in secret, from the fact that we were playing hooky so often and doing so many stupid things during the war — I identified with every occasion on which someone on the screen was shown to be bored, every time someone found themselves in an irregular situation. Reading Madame Bovary was a shock for me because it offered a parallel to my truancy. So many lovers and so many money troubles! That struck a chord with me; I detested everything that was normal.


What did cinema mean to you at that time?

With the passing of time, it has become obvious to me that cinema has been much more than merely a refuge. I'll admit now that the neurotic aspect of my love for cinema is unmistakable. In earlier times, I didn't understand that, I didn't have any awareness of the fact; today, I know it for sure. At the same time, it is difficult to talk about something that is so intimate and personal! It is no exaggeration to say that cinema saved my life. That's why I can't speak about it intellectually. From time to time I would use the expression "drug" before the word became fashionable ... The reason I threw myself so avidly into the cinema is probably because I was dissatisfied with my own life during the years of my early childhood — specifically, the years of the Occupation, since in 1942 I was ten years old. Thus 1942 is an important date for me: it is the moment when I began to go and see a lot of films. From the age of ten to nineteen I was obsessed with films. I'm unable to be objective about that.


What kind of cinema formed you?

I often say that the "Minnelli-ites" (fans of Minnelli) and the fans of American cinema are people who are not seeking to see themselves reflected in a film in any way. They are looking for total escape, including a change of visual scenery, which is to say, that they would prefer not to see their own town, their own streets, or their own world. Their need for escape is extreme. As far as I was concerned, perhaps because there were no American films during the Occupation, I was first formed by a handful of French films. I say "a handful" because, between 1942 and 1944, there were no more than forty or fifty, of which the most memorable was definitely Le Corbeau. Perhaps this was also because I preferred to encounter a world that was not too far removed from my own in real life ... I preferred, for example, modern films to period films, and psychological films and crime thrillers to other kinds of films ... That's all that I can say on that subject; anything else would be more appropriate as part of a study of cinema during the Occupation.


In what respects did you see Le Corbeau as reflecting the times?

It's a film I went to see about twenty times. Five or six times during the War, and then repeatedly when, having been censored at the Liberation, it was once again licensed to be shown. It is a film whose dialogue I have learned by heart, which is not surprising, and happens with all films that one sees enough times to know them intimately. From Le Corbeau I probably learned 150 words of vocabulary that I didn't know before; it contained a very adult kind of dialogue compared with the other cinema of the time, but also in relation to my own vocabulary. Even today, I still know by heart the text of anonymous letters in Le Corbeau ... I had not yet rebelled at that stage, but was on the verge of doing so, and these films presented a picture of society that spoke to me. The whole world was rotten, and there were things relating to love that seemed to me — it would be wrong to say "new," given that I had not had much experience — at any rate, "original." Even today, I find that the interactions between Pierre Fresnay and Ginette Leclerc are very powerful. They are still compelling, and have not become clichés.

Later, while continuing to love French cinema, I discovered American cinema. To be frank, to a certain extent it was my encounter with [Jacques] Rivette that diverted my attention away from French cinema. I remember that Rivette thought it was absurd to have seen Children of Paradise fourteen times, and to know Le Corbeau off by heart. For him, none of that held any interest, because he only responded to the mise-en-scène. And probably under the influence of Rivette and the people at the Cahiers, I, for a time, forgot all the things that are coming back to me now.


You were saying just now that you felt yourself to be completely a post-War child. Didn't you ever wonder what had happened in France, in Paris, during the War?

Yes, indeed, because I had an uncle who was deported, and I had been struck by the passivity of the people around me. When I was told that France was waiting to be liberated, I truly had the impression that that was not true. I saw such a lot of indifference around me. People would go out at night, to the theater, to the cinema, because the experience of entertainments was very important during the War. I lived at the intersection of rue Henri-Monnier and rue Frochot, at Pigalle. There were musicians in the street with whom I played when I came back from school. There was also blood, gunshots, the settling of scores, as well as many passionate affairs. There were German women in black stockings ...


German women?

Yes, "grey mice." As for me, I looked at that especially from the sexual angle. There was this whole sexual aspect to the Occupation that no one ever talks about, but which seems to me one of the most significant things about it. For example, people would make love in the street, there were no lights in the whole of Pigalle, one had to have a flashlight to go into the Metro, there were couples in the porches. During air raid warnings we would go to the Metro at Abbesses, Jules-Joffrin, Pigalle, it would be full wherever we went ...


Did you ever sleep in the Metro?

Yes, one day, Lachenay and I had "missed" so much that we didn't dare go back to school. We said to each other, "The bigger the excuses, the more likely they are to work." I went back and said to the teacher, "My father has been arrested by the Germans." That was in 1943, and my uncle had been arrested eight days earlier. There is always an element of truth underlying the lies of children, but my father came to get me. That caused a big drama, so that I didn't dare go home.

I was eleven. Lachenay told me that one could sleep in the deepest Metro stations that had been turned into air raid shelters. I went there. It was black as pitch. We were given a blanket, but they woke us up at five o'clock so that the Metro could begin operating. At that time you could get a liter of wine for 125 grams of copper, and so we would steal doorknobs and things like that, and then sell the wine. My father caught me, and he sent me to schools where he told them everything I had done. I was a "black sheep." Everything that I did was viewed askance; and so I didn't go back there. I went to the municipal library and devoured Balzac.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Truffaut On Cinema by Anne Gillain, Alistair Fox. Copyright © 1988 Editions Flammarion, Paris. Excerpted by permission of Indiana University Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Preface to the English Edition (2017)
Preface (1988)
Acknowledgments
A Note on the Translation

1. Childhood
2. The New Wave
3. The Auteur Theory
4. 1954: Une visite; 1957: Les Mistons; 1958: Histoire d’eau
5. 1959: The 400 Blows
6. 1960: Shoot the Pianist
7. 1962: Jules and Jim
8. 1962: Antoine and Colette
9. 1966: The Soft Skin
10. 1966: Fahrenheit 451
11. 1967: The Bride Wore Black
12. 1968: Stolen Kisses
13. May 1968
14. 1959-1968: Overview 1
15. 1969: Mississippi Mermaid
16. 1970: The Wild Child
17. 1970: Bed and Board
18. 1971: Two English Girls
19. 1972: A Gorgeous Girl like Me
20. 1973: Day for Night
21. 1969-1974: Overview 2
22. 1975: The Story of Adele H
23. 1976: Small Change
24. 1977: The Man Who Loved Women
25. 1978: The Green Room
26. 1979: Love on the Run
27. 1980: The Last Metro
28. 1981: The Woman Next Door
29. 1983: Confidentially Yours
30. 1975-1984: Overview 3

Sources
List of Films Discussed by Truffaut
Index

What People are Saying About This

author of What Cinema Is! - Dudley Andrew

No filmmaker cared more and wrote better about his work than Francois Truffaut.Each of his films provoked interviews that open uppast models, current trends, technological challenges, struggles with actors, the politics of criticism, and the quest for sublimity. Anne Gillain’s inspiring preface readies us for a vibrant, single-minded man, surprisingly timid, yet prepared to expose his values and the difficulties achieving them. Truffaut’s films are even more beautiful seen in light of his reflections on them.

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews