Jean Eustache

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Jean Eustache was also the name of a 17th century French organ maker.

Jean Eustache (November 30, 1938 - November 3, 1981) was a French filmmaker. During his short career, he completed numerous shorts, as well as two highly regarded features, of which the first, The Mother and the Whore, is considered a key work of post-Nouvelle Vague French cinema. [1][2]

In his obituary for Eustache, the influential critic Serge Daney wrote: "In the thread of the desolate 70s, his films succeeded one another, always unforeseen, without a system, without a gap: film-rivers, short films, TV programs, hyperreal fiction. Each film went to the end of its material, from real to fictional sorrow. It was impossible for him to go against it, to calculate, to take cultural success into account, impossible for this theoretician of seduction to seduce an audience." [3]

Biography

Eustache was born in Pessac, Gironde, France into a working class family. Relatively little information exists about Eustache’s life prior to the time he became a member of the Cahiers du cinema crowd in the late fifties, though it is known that he was largely self-educated and worked in the railroad service prior to becoming a filmmaker[4]. Information suggests that the mystery surrounding his youth was intentional, with sources stating that "during his lifetime Eustache published little information about his early years, indicating that he felt no nostalgia for an unhappy childhood." [5].

Though not a member of the Nouvelle vague, Eustache maintained ties to it, appearing as an actor in Jean-Luc Godard's Week End[6] and editing Luc Moullet's Une aventure de Billy le Kid[7], which starred Jean-Pierre Leaud (the lead in Eustache's The Mother and the Whore.

After becoming a filmmaker, Eustache maintained close ties to his friends and relatives in Pessac[8]. In 1981, he was partially immobilized in an auto accident. He killed himself in his apartment Paris, a few weeks before his 43rd birthday.

Eustache had a son, Boris Eustache (b. 1960), who worked on his father's second feature and appears as an actor in Eustache's short film Les Photos d'Alix.

Work

Eustache was quoted as saying, “The films I made are as autobiographical as fiction can be.” [9] Because of his reticence to discuss his personal life, it is assumed that his body of work was largely autobiographical. Besides his fictional shorts and features, Eustache made numerous documentaries, many of them very personal, including several shot in his hometown of Pessac and a feature-length interview with his grandmother.

In 1973 Jean Eustache directed one of his only two narrative features. "The Mother and the Whore" ("La maman et la putain") is Eustache’s three-hour-and-forty-minute rumination on love, relationships, men and women. The film’s central three-way romance plot focuses on Alexandre (Jean-Pierre Léaud), his girlfriend Marie (Bernadette Lafont) and the nurse he meets and falls in love with, Veronika (Françoise Lebrun). Aside from "The Mother and the Whore", Eustache’s filmography consists of Mes petites amoureuses (1974), his other narrative feature, and a handful of documentaries and shorts, often anthropological in nature. This work includes most notably "Santa Claus Has Blue Eyes" (Le Père Noël a les yeux bleus, 1966) which also stars Léaud.

Filmography

References