Jean Eustace

See also: Eustace

Jean Eustace (Pessac, November 30th 1938 - Paris, November 5th 1981) is a realizer français.
Sans to be recipient with the movement (it arrived too late at Paris to profit from the favorable current), he is recognized in the designs of the New wave. Its work is often autobiographical. Its most known film is the Mom and the Whore , left in 1973, with Jean-Pierre Léaud. Jean Eustace committed suicide in November 1981.

Catalog of films

  • 1963 : the evening , unfinished
  • 1964: the Bad companies , 42 minutes (first title, film in 16 mm), also known under the title On the side of Robinson (second title, film inflated in 35 mm)
  • 1966: the Father Christmas has the blue eyes , 47 minutes
  • 1968: Rosière de Pessac , 65 minutes
  • 1969: Two 26 minute old films each one, realized for television:
  • 1970: the Pig , 65 minutes, Co-realized with Jean-Michel Barjol
  • 1971: Number zero , 1:50 (titrated shortened version tele Odette Robert , 54 minutes)
  • 1973: the Mom and the Whore , 3:40
  • 1974: My small in love , 2:00
  • 1977: a nasty business , shutter document: 22 minutes and shutter fiction: 28 minutes
  • 1979: Rosière de Pessac , 67 minutes
  • 1980: the Garden of the delights of Jerome Bosch , 34 minutes
  • 1980: Offer of employment , 18 minutes
  • 1980: Photographs of Alix , 18 minutes

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