Jean Rochefort Movies

Though he is not quite the international icon that his erstwhile acting classmate and occasional co-star Jean-Paul Belmondo is, Jean Rochefort has been a fixture of French cinema for over four decades.
Deciding to pursue acting in his youth, Rochefort studied drama at the Paris Conservatory in the late '40s, at the same time as Belmondo. After military service briefly interrupted his career, Rochefort returned to Paris and began performing in cabaret and plays in the mid-'50s. He moved to films in the late '50s and early '60s, with small parts in several movies, including Une Balle dans le Canon (1958) and the swashbuckler Captain Fracasse (1960).
As the 1960s went on, Rochefort became famous for his work in crowd-pleasing genre movies. Among his prolific output, Rochefort played second banana to Belmondo in the adventure yarn Cartouche (1962), starred in the gangster movie Symphonie Pour un Massacre (1963) and the popular costume romance series Angelique Marquise des Anges (1964), Angelique et le Roi (1965), and Merveilleuse Angelique (1965). Working often with regular Belmondo director Philippe De Broca, Rochefort appeared in the pair's adventure hit Les Tribulations d'un Chinois en Chine (1965) and top-lined De Broca's crime comedy (sans Belmondo), Le Diable par la Queue (1968). Despite appearing in such films as the Brigitte Bardot romance Two Weeks in September (1967) and the murder mystery Le Temps de Mourir (1970), by the early '70s, Rochefort was best known as a comedy star. His comic reputation was sealed internationally by frequent Rochefort director Yves Robert's The Tall Blond Man With One Black Shoe (1972). An espionage farce featuring Rochefort as an enemy spy boss, The Tall Blond Man became a major hit and spawned a sequel (also starring Rochefort), The Return of the Tall Blond Man With One Black Shoe (1974).
By the time the sequel appeared, however, Rochefort had begun to branch out beyond his signature frothy fare. He played the lead role in the superior spy docudrama Le Complot (1973) and appeared in international art cinema titan Luis Buñuel's black comedy The Phantom of Liberty (1974); Rochefort would get to act for one of the original French New Wave auteurs in Claude Chabrol's thriller Dirty Hands (1975). His work with another critic-turned-director, Bertrand Tavernier, brought Rochefort even more esteem. After playing one of the leads in Tavernier's atmospheric debut The Clockmaker (1974), he earned the Best Supporting Actor César for Tavernier's excellent historical biopic Que la Fête Commence (1975). Balancing his new artistic success with his customary lighter work, Rochefort scored another popular hit as a married man with adultery on his mind in the romantic comedy Pardon Mon Affaire (1976) and the sequel We Will All Meet in Paradise (1977). He won the Best Actor César that same year, though, for his performance as a dying Algerian War naval captain in the metaphysical drama Le Crabe-Tambour (1977). Briefly dipping into American-European co-productions, Rochefort next appeared in the black comedy Who Is Killing the Great Chefs of Europe? (1978), and American Graffiti (1973) scribes Willard Huyck and Gloria Katz's ensemble comedy French Postcards (1979).
Still at the top of his game in the early '80s, Rochefort starred as an unwitting stooge in the assassination thriller Birgitt Haas Must Be Killed (1981) and played Simone Signoret's paraplegic brother in the astute, well-acted romantic drama Chère Inconnue (1981). His performance in the spy movie L'Indiscretion (1982) earned him the Best Actor prize at the Montreal Film Festival. Though his film output lessened in the mid-'80s, his career was reinvigorated when he began working with director Patrice Leconte in his Tandem (1987). The two scored international successes with The Hairdresser's Husband (1990), starring Rochefort as a man living out a childhood obsession, and the Oscar-nominated oddball period comedy Ridicule (1996). He also earned notice for his humorous appearances in Leconte's Tango (1993) and Les Grands Ducs (1996). Along with his Leconte films, Rochefort stayed busy throughout the 1990s, appearing in such movies as Robert Altman's all-star fashion fiasco Ready to Wear (1994), a TV miniseries of The Count of Monte Cristo (1998), and the biopic Rembrandt (1999). Rochefort was awarded an honorary César for career achievement in 1999.

Despite the career achievement laurels, Rochefort continued to work steadily into the next millennium. Along with lead roles in the Italian adventure comedy Honolulu Baby (2001) and the French swashbuckler Blanche (2002), Rochefort appeared in the internationally lauded satire The Closet (2001) as "closeted" straight man Daniel Auteuil's wary boss. Rochefort's most notable role of the new decade, though, was, as he himself put it, "the hero of a film that will never exist." Cast as the legendary eponymous dreamer in Terry Gilliam's big budget rendition of Miguel Cervantes's classic novel Don Quixote, Rochefort instead became a key player in the tale of the project's downfall documented in Lost In La Mancha (2003). With Gilliam's shoot already mired in difficulties, skilled horseman Rochefort's back injury became the final blow, leaving him physically unable to play the part and provoking the producers to pull the plug on Gilliam's time travel fantasy epic. The ill-fated film's second life via documentary was small consolation for Rochefort. Nevertheless, Rochefort found satisfaction in, and garnered praise for, his starring role in Patrice LeConte's dramatic comedy The Man on the Train (2002). Centering on the odd friendship between Rochefort's loquacious retired teacher and Johnny Hallyday's hardened gangster, The Man on the Train was well received on the festival circuit and earned positive notice when it was released in the U.S. in 2003. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
1961  
 
A French video crew trek across some scenic spots in the USSR in this routine combination travelogue-drama. Good documentary footage on various sites has been spliced with the storyline about one man in the film crew who is looking for an old buddy. This gives some excuse to roam far and wide, helped further by another search for a woman who has run away from someone in the crew because of a lover's misunderstanding. This traveling melodrama is directed by Marcel Pagliero. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Tatiana SamoilovaLeon Zitrone, (more)
1961  
 
Based on a novel by Theophile Gautier, this costume drama by Pierre Gaspard-Huit is set in 17th-century France and centers around De Sigognac (Jean Marais), a nobleman fallen on hard times. The once-wealthy and still-titled gentleman is currently working with an itinerant acting troupe where he comes across Isabelle (Genevieve Grad) a comely maid who tugs at his heart strings. He falls in love with her, but she is unwilling to make a commitment. Meanwhile, another of the titled gentry has been chasing after Isabelle with a little more success, in that he simply kidnaps her. The story takes a surprising turn when Isabelle's parentage is revealed. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Jean MaraisGenevieve Grad, (more)
1962  
 
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Jean-Paul Belmondo romps his way through the role of 18th century French bandit chief Cartouche. At first robbing from everyone in sight (he has to -- he's head man of a Parisian crime syndicate) Cartouche is rechanneled into becoming a Gallic Robin Hood by beauteous gypsy Venus (Claudia Cardinale). In Highwayman fashion, Venus eventually sacrifices her own life to save Cartouche from harm. He vows to continue his activities to avenge her death, but still manages to have a riproaring good time doing so. Hilarious without being condescending, Cartouche was reissued under the completely inappropriate title Swords of Blood. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Jean-Paul BelmondoClaudia Cardinale, (more)
1962  
 
An aging musketeer is called out of retirement to help a king in this comic swashbuckler. The king's twin brother is freed after twenty years in an iron mask. He is to be used as a decoy for the monarch while the real king and his court roust some rebels to foil their insurgent uprising. D'Artagnan (Jean Marais) leads the way with his expert fencing to aid in the royal flush. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Jean MaraisJean-Francois Poron, (more)
1963  
 
The experiences of young school boys are illustrated in this lighthearted film in which a song precedes each story. One boy is compelled to shoplift when he is ignored by his parents. Another less-scholarly inclined boy shows incredible mechanical aptitude when he fixes the principal's car. Yet another lad gets a lesson in economics when he finds some paper money. The boys all learn that valuable lessons are not always confined to the classroom. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Yvonne ClechJean Rochefort, (more)
1963  
 
Trouble begins when five Frenchmen pool their money in an attempt to pull off a huge drug deal. One intercepts the money and kills his friend to cover his tracks. The others are haunted by doubt and innuendo to the point where they all point fingers and guns at each other. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Michel AuclairClaude Dauphin, (more)
1964  
 
Dany Carrel and Danielle Darrieux star in this adaptation of a novel by Jean-Pierre Ferriere. Attending the funeral of her husband, a widow notices a stranger present. The stranger turns out to be a woman who was involved with a drug deal her deceased husband was making. Now the stranger is after some missing heroin and uses her boyfriend to try to find out where it might be. The unfortunate widow, however, is not as much a victim as she seems. French director Jacques Poitrenaud of Du Grabuge Ches Les Veuve/Trouble Among Women would go on to act in such films as Autour de Minuit/'Round Midnight and Un Dimanche a la Campagne/A Sunday in the Country. ~ Kristie Hassen, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Danielle DarrieuxDany Carrel, (more)
1964  
 
Angelique (Michele Mercier), the beautiful daughter of a once-wealthy nobleman, is married off to their rich neighbor Joffray de Peyrac (Robert Hossein) in this provocative 17th-century costumed drama. Theirs is at first a marriage of convenience until she begins to fall for Joffray. When he is arrested and disappears, Angelique sets out to find the man she loves in this first of a series of five films starring Mercier taken from the novel by Serge and Anne Golon. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Michele MercierRobert Hossein, (more)
1965  
 
Polly Dorothy MacGowan is a model who tells about her experiences when she is interviewed by a television crew in this offbeat satirical comedy. She dreams of a life with prince charming Sami Frey while contending with the lecherous advances of a whole string of men who constantly hit on her. Some spy spoofs and television satires are included in this the directorial debut of William Klein. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Jean RochefortPhilippe Noiret, (more)
1965  
 
Angelique (Michele Mercier) is saved by the king of the cutthroats (Giuliano Gemma) when she is endangered in the streets of Paris. After her hero is killed, she has many amorous affairs and becomes a successful businesswoman in this costume-drama sequel based on the book by Serge and Anne Golon. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Michele MercierJean-Louis Trintignant, (more)
1965  
 
Arthur Lempereur (Jean-Paul Belmondo of Breathless) is a globe-hopping millionaire, engaged to Alice (Valérie Lagrange), a beautiful young woman. As the film opens, Arthur has cut the break line on his fine automobile and proceeds to drive it off a cliff. This, we learn, is his ninth suicide attempt in the past week. Arthur is bored with his easy life. Even learning from his accountant, Biscotton (Darry Cowl), that he's ruined doesn't perk him up. On a cruise to Hong Kong, his friend Mr. Goh (Valéry Inkijinoff) comes up with a solution to Arthur's woes: "Adversity carries the chance for happiness," he explains to the despondent young man. Goh convinces Arthur to take out a two-million-dollar life insurance policy, with Goh and Alice as the beneficiaries. The policy will expire in one month. Goh then tells Arthur that his life is in danger. He may be killed at any moment. Arthur soon realizes that he's being followed. He's not so eager to be murdered. Arthur and his valet, Leon (Jean Rochefort of The Hairdresser's Husband), frantically search for Goh to ask him to call off the hit. At one point, Arthur ducks into a nightclub to dodge his pursuers, and instantly falls for Alexandrine (Ursula Andress), the stripper on-stage. Alexandrine is fascinated by the ways men try to manipulate women and assumes that Arthur's story about hired killers is a bizarre ruse. All the more determined to survive the month, the bumbling Arthur engages in a fierce battle for his life. Up to His Ears is both a loose adaptation of a Jules Verne story (Les Tribulations d'un Chinois en Chine) and a hyped-up return to the form of director Philippe de Broca's previous action comedy, That Man from Rio, which also starred Belmondo. ~ Josh Ralske, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Jean-Paul BelmondoUrsula Andress, (more)
1966  
 
Michelle Mercier continues in her role as Angelique, the beautiful woman in the court of King Louis XIV. She beds down several men before her husband, who she believed was dead, returns for her. This is the third in a series of romantic costumed dramas that chronicle Angelique's amorous adventures. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Michele MercierRobert Hossein, (more)
1967  
 
This light comedy finds an inept reporter keeping his job only because his uncle owns the paper he works for. He is assigned to cover the story of a woman giving birth to sextuplets on a small island off the coast of France. The gullible reporter is given a false story, by a social worker, that Martians have landed on the island. When he prints the story, the island is besieged with visitors and curiosity seekers. Among the visitors are two beings from another planet who really believe their interplanetary brethren have arrived. The sextuplets are born, but the reporter is fired. He missed two really big scoops that have the newborns taken away in a spaceship by their father, a real alien. A giant dinosaur-like creature emerges from the watery depths of the ocean to see what all the fuss is about. The reporter and babies are long gone and the disinterested monster gives the island one last look before going home. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Jean RochefortMacha Meril, (more)
1967  
 
Too old to be a gamine yet not old enough for matronhood, Brigitte Bardot is the ideally cast leading lady of Serge Bourguignon's Head Over Heels. Bardot plays a thirtysomething beauty who finds herself torn between two desirable lovers. The film's alternate English-language title, Two Weeks in September, symbolically conveys the ambience of the film: Bardot is loved by a man much older than herself, and in turn falls in love with a man much younger than herself. All of the characters are old enough to know better than to enter into a menage a trois, yet this little fling may be the last chance for true happiness for at least two of the participants. Director Bourguignon collaborated on the bittersweet script of Head Over Heels, which was originally released in France as A Coeur Joie. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Brigitte BardotLaurent Terzieff, (more)
1968  
NR  
A trio of French actors head to Rio in hopes of making decisions about their future. Instead, they end up contending with romance. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Jean RochefortJulien Guiomar, (more)
1969  
 
An eccentric family in need of money turns their crumbling chateau into a hotel in order to renovate the old place. Repairs are made to the aging structure, but they only have one guest and too many empty rooms. The young granddaughter, with the help of her mechanic boyfriend, manages to make sure all the cars that stop at his garage are in need of overnight repairs. The hotel business soon improves as tourists are stranded and forced to seek lodging at the chateau. Cesar (Yves Montand) leads a trio of bank robbers to the hotel. Posing as aristocratic nobles, the crooks hide out in the splendor of the old house, charming the ladies and winning at poker games to pass the time. The mother of the family offers herself as a lure to draw more guests, who often take advantage of her adulterous yearnings. The hotel business does very well as the family saves their ancestral home after a dubious start in this romantic comedy. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Yves MontandMaria Schell, (more)
1970  
 
A young man leaves home when he finds the marriage of his mutually adulterous parents to be hypocritical in this romantic comedy satire. He has a gay artist pursuing him and a mistress he does not care for very much. When he leaves home, the mother beds down with the homosexual while his father takes on his son's former mistress. The young man meets a girl, and the two have an affair while the May 1968 riots in Paris enfold. She leaves him for a while to take part in the political turmoil, but returns to her apolitical lover when her efforts prove to be ineffective. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Bernard Le CoqJuliette Villard, (more)
1970  
 
Max (Bruno Cremer) cares for a mystery girl (Anna Karina) when she falls off her horse in a riding mishap. A film cannister is her only possession as she is taken to his high tech hideaway. She accidently witnesses a video taped murder and is marked for elimination by the killer. Max is kidnapped but is unaware the girl has seen the video. The murderer receives a copy of the incident at work from an unknown sender. He goes after Max, whose wife is killed in the ensuing gun battle. The mystery girl races to Max with new information on film that can identify the killer in this murder drama with science fiction overtones. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Anna KarinaBruno Cremer, (more)
1970  
 
Celeste (Debora Duarte) is the maid from Portugal working in France and is politically involved in a Marxist-Leninist group in this romantic comedy. A television journalist (Jean Rochefort) is the amorous playboy who eventually falls in love with her. Lea Massari also stars in this offbeat feature that finds the man losing the pretty maid to the faithfulness of her political ideals. ~ Dan Pavlides, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Debora DuarteJean Rochefort, (more)
1972  
 
This tragic French melodrama brings to the screen the story of Marie-Louise (Anne Giradot), a woman whose love for her ex-husband will not die even though he seems to be a heartless cad. Alexandre left her, he says, because she attended a few leftist marches and demonstrations. However, he has set up housekeeping in their old neighborhood. Marie-Louise keeps hoping that he will come back to her. She is so attached to this idea that when her son finally convinces her that he will never return, the realization has dire consequences. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Annie GirardotBernard Fresson, (more)
1972  
 
The Egg is "the system," and Magis (Guy Bedos) wants to be a part of it, somehow. He works in a stuffy store and, out of boredom more than anything else, has an affair with an elderly maid. This tasteless act gets him fired. He makes the acquaintance of a middle-class family who help him get a government job and offer one of their daughters as his wife. Soon, he finds his new wife boring and takes comfort with the earthy old cleaning woman. Eventually, he kills his new wife and frames her lover for the deed. This somehow makes him feel that he is now an official member of "The Egg." ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide

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