1948: Aller et retour (Aller-retour) (+scenarist/scriptwriter). 1949: Ulysse ou Les Mauvaises rencontres (+scenarist/scriptwriter). 1953: Le Rideau cramoisi (The Crimson Curtain) (+scenarist/scriptwriter). 1955: Les Mauvaises rencontres (+co-scenarist/scriptwriter). 1958: Une Vie (End of Desire) (+co-scenarist/scriptwriter). 1960: La Proie pour I'ombre (+co-scenarist/scriptwriter). 1962: L'Education sentimentale (Lessons in Love) (+scenarist/scriptwriter). 1963: Le Puits et le pendule (The Pit and the Pendulum) (for TV) (+scenarist/scriptwriter). 1965: Evariste Galois (+scenarist/scriptwriter). 1966: La Longue Marche (+co-scenarist/scriptwriter). 1968: Flammes sur I'Adriatique (+co-scenarist/scriptwriter). 1976: Sartre par lui-m?me (co-director). 1978: Louis XI ou La naissance director'un roi (TV). 1979: Louis XI ou Le pouvoir central (TV). 1980: ? une voix producer?s... ou La naissance de la IIIe r?publique (TV). 1981: Histoires extraordinaires: La chute de la maison Usher (The Fall of the House of Usher; TV). 1989: Une fille director'?ve (+scenarist/scriptwriter). 1993: Albert Savarus (+scenarist/scriptwriter).
1948: Jean de la Lune (Achard) (co-scenarist/scriptwriter). 1949: La P... respecteuse (Pagliero) (co-scenarist/scriptwriter); La Valse de Paris (Achard) (role). 1950: L'Affaire Manet (Aurel) (commentary). 1954: Le Vicomte de Bragelonne (Cerchio) (co-scenarist/scriptwriter). 1964: Bassae (Pollet) (scenarist/scriptwriter). 1974: La jeune Fille assassinee (role as publisher). 1993: Fran?ois Truffaut: Stolen Portraits (role as himself). 2001: Les ?mes fortes (scenarist/scriptwriter, adaptation, dialogue).
Literary and film critic, since 1945; published novel Les Vacances, 1945; assistant to Marcel Achard and Marc Allegret, 1946-47; made two short films, 1948-49; began series of six feature-length films with Mauvaises rencontres, 1955; TV reporter for Radio Luxembourg, 1969-72.
Chevalier de la L?gion director'honneur; Officier de I'Ordre du Merite; Officier designer Arts et designer Lettres.
Paris, 13 July 1923.
Saint-Germain-en-Laye, and at Poly technique.
Married Elyette Helies, 1983.
Alexandre Astruc was the embodiment of the revolutionary hopes of a renewed cinema after the war. True, Clement, Bresson, and Melville were already making films in a new way, but making them in the age-old industry. Astruc represented a new, arrogant sensibility. He had grown up on the ideas of Sartre and was one of the youthful literati surrounding the philosopher in the St. Germain-des-Pr?s cafes. There he talked of a new French culture being born, one that demanded new representations in fiction and film.
His personal aspirations were great and grew even greater when his novel Les Vacances was published by the prestigious N.R.F., almost winning an important prize. While writing essays on art and culture for Combat and L'Ecran fran?ais he became convinced that the cinema must replace the novel.
But first the cinema must become more like the novel. In his crucial essay ?Le Camera stylo,? written the same year as Sartre's ?Situation of the Writer in 1948,? he called for an end to institutional cinema and for a new style that would be both personal and malleable. He wanted cinema to be able to treat diverse ideas and a range of expressions. He, like Sartre, wanted to become ethical.
This was the first loud clarion cry of the New Wave and it provoked attention in its own day. Astruc found himself linked with Bazin, Cocteau, Marker, and Tacchella against the Stalinists at L'Ecran fran?ais, led by Louis Daquin. Banding together to form ?Objectif 48,? these men created a new atmosphere for cinema, attracting the young Truffaut and Godard to their screenings.
Everyone looked to Astruc to begin turning out short films, but his l6mm efforts ran aground. Soon he began writing scripts for acceptable standard directors like Marc Allegret. Finally in 1952 he was able to make Le Rideau cramoisi in his own way. It was a remarkable way: this nineteenth-century mystery tale was reduced to a set of unforgettable images and a soundtrack that contained no dialogue whatsoever. Pushing the voice-over discoveries of Bresson and Melville to the limit, Astruc's narrational device places the film somewhere between dream and memory. This coincides perfectly with the haunting night photography and Anouk Aim?e's inscrutably romantic performance.
There followed more adaptations, not because Astruc had joined the industry's penchant for such quality material, but because he always believed in the overriding import of style, seeing plots as pretexts only. The color photography in Une Vie, for example, explores the painterly concerns of the impressionists. But since the plot comes from a Maupassant tale written in the same era, the result is unpretentious.
In his older age Astruc has renounced this obsession with style. The themes that possess him now, crises in marriage and love, can actually be seen in all his earlier work as well. Now he can explore these issues in television, the medium that seems perfectly suited to his early ideas. Only now his ideas have changed and so has his following. Alexandre Astruc must always be mentioned in any chronicle of modern French cinema, but his career can only be thought of as disappointing.?DUDLEY ANDREW