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Jean Eustache

Director

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Jean Eustache (French: [øs.taʃ]; 30 November 1938 – 5 November 1981) was a French filmmaker. During his short career, he completed numerous short films, in addition to a pair of highly regarded features, of which the first, The Mother and the Whore, is considered a key work of post-Nouvelle Vague French cinema.

In his obituary for Eustache, the 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.

Jim Jarmusch dedicated his 2005 film Broken Flowers to Eustache.

Source: Wikidata , August 2023

Related works

Credits

Born
30 Nov 1938
Died
3 Nov 1981 (aged 42)
Production Places
France

On other websites

Collection metadata

ACMI Identifier

21530

Wikidata

Q966198

VIAF

71409609

LOC Auth

n85112709

WorldCat

lccn-n85112709

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