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Overview
User Rating:
Director:
Writers:
Henri-Pierre Roché (novel)
François Truffaut (adaptation) ...
more
Release Date:
23 January 1962 (France) more
Plot:
Decades of a love triangle concerning two friends and an impulsive woman. full summary | add synopsis
Awards:
Nominated for 2 BAFTA Film Awards. Another 3 wins more
NewsDesk:
(3 articles)
Review: 'Two Girls and a Guy' on Blu-ray
(From Comicmix. 6 November 2009, 1:07 PM, PST)
Tao Ruspoli's Top Ten Films of All Time
(From ioncinema. 3 November 2009)
User Comments:
Truffaut's "Hymn to Life" more (90 total)
Cast
(Complete credited cast)| Jeanne Moreau | ... | Catherine | |
| Oskar Werner | ... | Jules (as Oscar Werner) | |
| Henri Serre | ... | Jim | |
| Vanna Urbino | ... | Gilberte | |
| Boris Bassiak | ... | Albert (as Bassiak) | |
| Anny Nelsen | ... | Lucie | |
| Sabine Haudepin | ... | Sabine, la petite | |
| Marie Dubois | ... | Thérèse | |
| Michel Subor | ... | Récitant / Narrator (voice) |
Additional Details
Also Known As:
Jules and Jim (UK) (USA)
more
Parents Guide:
Runtime:
105 min
Country:
Color:
Aspect Ratio:
2.35 : 1 more
Sound Mix:
Certification:
Argentina:Atp | Australia:PG (DVD rating) | Portugal:M/12 (re-rating) (1975) | Portugal:M/16 (DVD re-rating) | South Korea:15 | Singapore:PG | Australia:M | Finland:K-16 | France:U | Hong Kong:IIA | Portugal:17 (original rating) | Sweden:15 | Sweden:7 (re-release: 2003) | UK:PG | West Germany:12
Filming Locations:
Company:
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
In Jean-Luc Godard's picture Une femme est une femme (1961), Jeanne Moreau appears as herself. This becomes obvious because Jean-Paul Belmondo's character, while meeting her at a café, asks her: "How is 'Jules And Jim' coming?" Une femme est une femme (1961) was released in 1961, while Jules et Jim (1962) in 1962, but the reference exists because François Truffaut and Godard were friends at the time, and often collaborated in each others movies. more
Goofs:
Continuity: When Catherine lights the letters on fire, they are at first away from her dress, but in the next shot they are burning on top of her dress. more
Quotes:
Récitant: Catherine's plunge into the river so astonished Jim that he drew it the next day, though he didn't usually draw. Admiration for Catherine welled up in him and he sent her a kiss in his mind. more
Soundtrack:
Le Tourbillon more
FAQ
This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.more (90 total)
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Related Links
| Full cast and crew | Company credits | External reviews |
| News articles | IMDb Drama section | IMDb France section |
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Although "Jules and Jim" was made over 40 years ago and takes place 40 to 50 years before that, the amazing thing is that it barely seems to have dated. Because it focuses on the universal human relationships between its characters, rather than the specific time in which they live, it's the rare film set in the past that doesn't feel like a "period film." And, especially in the first half of the movie, Truffaut's New Wave techniques lend a remarkable energy and freshness.
The movie explores friendship and love among three semi-bohemian types: Parisian Jim (Henri Serre), Austrian Jules (Oskar Werner), and Catherine (Jeanne Moreau), the beautiful, free-spirited woman whom they both love. She's the most vibrant character in the movie, and impossible to pin down. It's never clear who she lovesshe contradicts herself repeatedly, and perhaps loves no one but herselfor whether she's diabolical or simply misunderstood. Moreau nearly steals the movie, if not for the fact that the title reminds us to focus on the relationship between the two men, and that Serre and Werner give good performances too. Even if Jim and Jules aren't as mysterious as Catherine, they're complex and interesting characters in their own right.
The story plays out rather episodically, which means "Jules and Jim" is full of wonderful little moments, often involving the crazy things Catherine does. Some of my favorites include her dressing up as a man and racing Jules and Jim across a bridge; her jumping into the Seine in frustration; and her singing the movie's charming theme song, "The Whirlpool of Life." The episodes are linked together by surprisingly unobtrusive off-screen narration, which keeps the film moving along rather than slowing it down.
"Jules and Jim" does get a little tiresome toward the end, with Catherine continually vacillating between the men in her life, Jim vacillating between Catherine and his old girlfriend Gilberte, and Jules remaining loyally devoted to Catherine despite how foolish this may seem. However, the movie is redeemed by its tragic final scenes, which poignantly contrast with the carefree gaiety of the beginning. Jules, Jim, and Catherine are caught in a destructive spiral, tossed and defeated by the whirlpool of life. Still, the tone of the movie is gentle and human, not pessimistic. Truffaut considered "Jules and Jim" a "hymn to life," and it is most memorable as a vivid celebration of friendship and youthful possibility, even as it acknowledges how those things can sour.