Jules and Jim | |
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original film poster © Christian Broutin
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Directed by | François Truffaut |
Produced by | Marcel Berbert François Truffaut |
Screenplay by | François Truffaut Jean Gruault |
Based on |
Jules et Jim by Henri-Pierre Roché |
Starring |
Jeanne Moreau Oskar Werner Henri Serre |
Narrated by | Michel Subor |
Music by | Georges Delerue |
Cinematography | Raoul Coutard |
Edited by | Claudine Bouché |
Production
company |
Les Films du Carrosse/ SEDIF
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Distributed by |
Cinédis Gala Janus Films |
Release date
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Running time
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105 minutes |
Country | France |
Language | French |
Box office | 1,595,379 admissions (France) |
Jules and Jim (French: Jules et Jim, IPA: [ʒyl e dʒim]) is a 1962 French romantic drama film, directed, produced and written by François Truffaut. Set around the time of World War I, it describes a tragic love triangle involving French Bohemian Jim (Henri Serre), his shy Austrian friend Jules (Oskar Werner), and Jules's girlfriend and later wife Catherine (Jeanne Moreau).
The film is based on Henri-Pierre Roché's 1953 semi-autobiographical novel describing his relationship with young writer Franz Hessel and Helen Grund, whom Hessel married. Truffaut came across the book in the mid-1950s whilst browsing through some secondhand books at a shop along the Seine in Paris. Later he befriended the elderly Roché, who had published his first novel at the age of 74. The author approved of the young director's interest to adapt his work to another medium.
The film won the 1962 Grand Prix of French film prizes, the Étoile de Cristal, and Jeanne Moreau won that year's prize for best actress. The film ranked 46 in Empire magazine's "The 100 Best Films Of World Cinema" in 2010. The soundtrack by Georges Delerue was named as one of the "10 best soundtracks" by Time magazine in its "All Time 100 Movies" list. Professor Stephen Hawking has called it his "favorite movie of all time." The shooting of the movie was the subject of a documentary directed in 2009 by Thierry Tripod.