The best Jean Cocteau’s documentary movies

Jean Cocteau

Jean Cocteau

05/07/1889- 11/10/1963
If you love cinema, you will share this ranking of the best Jean Cocteau’s movies, although you may have ordered them differently. In any case, we hope you love it and with a little luck discovering a movie that you still don’t know about Jean Cocteau.

Art of Style: Jean Cocteau

Art of Style: Jean Cocteau
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 06/12/2018
  • Character: Himself (archive footage)
French artist Jean Cocteau's multifaceted work across poetry, plays, paintings and film made him one of the leading creative figures of the Parisian avant-garde movement. Featuring Cocteau's own writings read by actor Timothée Chalamet, explore the dream-like quality of Cocteau's one of a kind oeuvre.

Disorder

Disorder
5.6/10
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 01/01/1949
  • Character: Himself
Docufiction set in the Paris art scene.

Jean Cocteau: Lies and Truths

Jean Cocteau: Lies and Truths
6.3/10
This documentary consists mainly of archive interviews of Jean Cocteau, and it features interesting contributions by Jean Marais and especially Jean-Luc Godard, who discusses Cocteau's foray into cinema. The film documents all the artistic media explored by a man who defined himself, first and foremost, as a poet.

Callas Assoluta

Callas Assoluta
7.5/10
This revealing documentary from director Philippe Kohly examines the storied life of renowned soprano Maria Callas, from her troubled childhood in New York City to her scandal-laden but triumphant international career in opera. Featuring archival interviews with Callas herself and footage of contemporaries such as her lover Aristotle Onassis, this celebration of "La Divina" pays tribute to her enduring legacy some three decades after her death.

A Night at the Opera

A Night at the Opera
6.5/10
A documentary view of the galas of Paris’s Palais Garnier in the 1950s and ’60s.

La Villa Santo-Sospir

La Villa Santo-Sospir
6.5/10
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 05/12/1952
  • Character: himself
Cocteau takes the viewer on a tour of a friend's villa on the French coast (a major location used in Testament of Orpheus). The house itself is heavily decorated, mostly by Cocteau (and a bit by Picasso), and we are given an extensive tour of the artwork. Cocteau also shows us several dozen paintings as well. Most cover mythological themes, of course. He also proudly shows paintings by Edouard Dermithe and Jean Marais and plays around his own home in Villefranche.

Jean Cocteau Addresses the Year 2000

Jean Cocteau Addresses the Year 2000
6.7/10
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 12/06/1962
  • Character: Himself
Just a couple of months before his death, in August 1963, he made one last film: a 25-minute short entitled Jean Cocteau s’adresse à l’an 2000 (Cocteau addresses the year 2000). The film comprises one still and highly sober shot of Cocteau facing the camera head-on to address the youth of the future. Once recorded, this spoken message for the 21st century was wrapped up, sealed and posted on the understanding that it would be opened only in the year 2000 (as it turned out, it was discovered and exhumed a few years shy of that date). If in The Testament Cocteau portrays himself as a living anachronism, a lonesome classical modernist loitering in space-time in the same buckskin jacket and tie while lost in the spectral light of his memories, here he acknowledges explicitly the irony of his phantom-like state: by the time the viewer sees this image, he, J. C., our saviour Poet, will long be dead.

Great Writers: Jean Cocteau

Great Writers: Jean Cocteau
  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release: 05/07/1996
  • Character: Himself
Jean Cocteau (1889-1963), was a French poet, novelist, dramatist, designer, and filmmaker, whose versatility, unconventionality, and enormous output brought him international acclaim. As a leading member of the surrealist movement, he had a great influence on the work of others.

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