Jean Aurenche

Jean Aurenche (1903–1992) was a French screenwriter. During his career, he wrote 80 films for directors such as René Clément, Bertrand Tavernier, Marcel Carné, Jean Delannoy and Claude Autant-Lara. He is often associated with the screenwriter Pierre Bost, with whom he had a fertile partnership from 1940 to 1975. In the 1920s and 1930s, Jean Aurenche was friends with some members of the surrealist groups. His sister Marie-Berthe was the wife of Max Ernst and Max Ernst soon became friend with Jean Aurenche. Later, he even appeared in some film commercials directed by Jean Aurenche (for the "Nicolas" Wine, the "Barbes" stores and so on...). Jean Aurenche was also a close friend of Jean Cocteau who helped him publish several of his short stories in the famous "NRF". In 1933, Jean Aurenche co-directed two short documentaries with Pierre Charbonnier: Pirates du Rhône and Bracos de Sologne. He later co-wrote the short film Monsieur Cordon with director Pierre Prévert. He soon turned to screenwriting, writing or co-writing several films like L'affaire du Courrier de Lyon (1936) by Maurice Lehmann and Claude Autant-Lara, L'affaire Lafarge or, more famously, Hôtel du Nord that he co-wrote with Marcel Carné and Henri Jeanson. In 1942, starting with Douce (directed by Autant-Lara), Aurenche formed a longstanding partnership with Pierre Bost. Their method of writing together initially worked as such: Jean Aurenche wrote the treatment of the screenplay (sometimes based on a novel) and Pierre Bost then expanded this outline and wrote the dialogue. But soon, both of them wrote all the script together without any clear division of the writing. Together, Aurenche & Bost wrote several great successes of this time period, often associated with director Claude Autant-Lara : le Diable au corps (1945), l'Auberge rouge (1951), le Rouge et le Noir (1954), la Traversée de Paris (1956). Meanwhile, Aurenche & Bost started a fertile collaboration with Jean Delannoy, writing for him La Symphonie Pastorale (1947) which won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Festival of 1947. During this time, they also worked with René Clément (Au-delà des grilles, Jeux interdits and Gervaise). The film Jeux Interdits won the Academy Award on the Best Foreign Film in 1952 and soon became a classic. All these critic and commercial triumph contributed to make of Aurenche one of the most revered screenwriters of his time. ... Source: Article "Jean Aurenche" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.

Crew

Forbidden Games

(Dialogue)

Keep an Eye on Amelia

(Screenplay)

The Hunchback of Notre Dame

(Screenplay)

The Red Inn

(Screenplay)

Coup de Torchon

(Writer)

The Proud and the Beautiful

(Writer)

The Green Mare

(Writer)

Gervaise

(Writer)

Let Joy Reign Supreme

(Screenplay)

Une femme en blanc se révolte

(Scenario Writer)

Adrien

(Writer)

Potatoes

(Writer)

Le Colisée

(Screenplay)

Le Colisée

(Writer)

Pastoral Symphony

(Adaptation)

Pastoral Symphony

(Dialogue)

The Stream

(Screenplay)

Les Pirates du Rhône

(Director)

Fucking Fernand

(Scenario Writer)

The Watchmaker of St. Paul

(Writer)

Mademoiselle Nitouche

(Writer)

Crime Does Not Pay

(Scenario Writer)

The Emigrant

(Story)

The North Star

(Writer)

Love Letters

(Writer)

The Traveler Without Luggage

(Writer)

Lady of the Camelias

(Writer)

Imperial Venus

(Writer)

This Special Friendship

(Writer)

The Judge and the Assassin

(Writer)

Thou Shalt Not Kill

(Writer)

Le Rouge et le Noir

(Writer)

La Traversée de Paris

(Writer)

A Woman in White

(Adaptation)

Way of Youth

(Writer)

The Little Ones of the Flower Platform

(Screenplay)

Forbidden to Love

(Dialogue)

The Oldest Profession

(Writer)

A Woman Like Satan

(Writer)

Douce

(Dialogue)

Douce

(Adaptation)

The Marriage of Chiffon

(Screenplay)

Love Letters

(Dialogue)

Thou Shalt Not Kill

(Dialogue)

The Regattas of San Francisco

(Dialogue)

Devil in the Flesh

(Writer)

Eight Men in a Castle

(Screenplay)

The Seven Deadly Sins

(Screenplay)

Confessions of a Newlywed

(Screenplay)

God Needs Men

(Screenplay)

Madame Sans-Gêne

(Screenplay)

The Lovers of the Pont Saint-Jean

(Screenplay)

The Séance Is Over

(Director)

The Séance Is Over

(Writer)

Franciscan of Bourges

(Writer)

Long Live Henry IV... Long Live Love!

(Writer)

Black Humor

(Writer)

Rendezvous

(Writer)

The Gambler

(Writer)

The Lafarge Case

(Screenplay)

The Lafarge Case

(Story)

Sylvia and the Ghost

(Screenplay)

Douce

(Screenplay)

The Walls of Malapaga

(Screenplay)

Enough Rope

(Screenplay)

The Red Inn

(Story)

The Little Rebels

(Adaptation)

The Little Rebels

(Dialogue)

The Red Inn

(Story)

It Happened All Night

(Screenplay)

The Passion of Bernadette

(Writer)

Gigolo

(Writer)

Levitan: That Night

(Director)

Le Colisée

(Director)

The Lightning Rod Thief

(Original Story)

The Seventh Door

(Writer)

Daughters of Destiny

(Writer)

Hôtel du Nord

(Screenplay)

The Scarecrow

(Writer)

La Tradition de minuit

(Screenplay)

Engagements of the Heart

(Writer)

The Game of Love

(Adaptation)

The Game of Love

(Dialogue)

Love is My Profession

(Screenplay)

Levitan: That Night

(Screenplay)

Levitan: That Night

(Writer)

The Note Seller

(Writer)

Molière pour rire et pour pleurer

(Script)