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The Adventures of Antoine Doinel — 4K

by Glenn Erickson Jul 22, 2025

Is he a feisty French everyman or a selfish jerk? &nbsp:Are we talking about the fictional character Antoine Doinel, or the actor Jean-Pierre Léaud?  François Truffaut hit on a genuine New Wave breakthrough, combining drama with ‘interview’ material, but soon proceeded to thrillers and dramas in a standard no-nouvelle vague format. Criterion assembled DVDs of all of Truffaut’s Antoine Doinel films in one box back in 2003; now we get to peruse them in full-on 4K Ultra HD.


The Adventures of Antoine Doinel 4K
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray
The Criterion Collection 185
1959-79 / Color / 2:35 widescreen & 1:66 widescreen / 414 min. / available through The Criterion Collection / Street Date July 15, 2025 / 124.95
Starring: Jean-Pierre Léaud
Cinematography: Henri Decaë, Raoul Coutard, Denys Clerval, Néstor Almendros (2)
Directed by
François Truffaut

 

Who the Hell is Antoine Doinel?
 

Back in the early days of DVD, the Criterion Collection found it could group films in boxed sets where appropriate. The Adventures of Antoine Doinel shapes up as an excellent introduction to the world of François Truffaut. This new upgrade of a 2003 disc set gathers François Truffaut’s entire Antoine Doinel cycle of pictures, four features and one shorter piece, filmed between 1959 and 1979. All star Jean-Pierre Léaud. The boxed set also includes two Truffaut short subjects, many interview clips and a couple of additional documentaries on Truffaut, plus text essays in an accompanying booklet.

Let’s get the film credits out of the way:

The 400 Blows
1959 / B&W / 2:35 widescreen / 99 min. / Les quatre cents coups
Starring Jean-Pierre Léaud, Claire Maurier, Albert Rémy
Cinematography Henri Decaë
Film Editor Marie-Josèphe Yoyotte
Original Music Jean Constantin
Written by F. Truffaut and M. Moussy
Directed by François Truffaut

Antoine and Colette
1962 / B&W / 2:35 widescreen / 30 min. / episode of Love at Twenty
Starring Jean-Pierre Léaud, Marie-France Pisier, Rosy Varte, Francois Darbon
Cinematography Raoul Coutard
Film Editor Claudine Bouché
Original Music Georges Delerue
Written by François Truffaut
Produced by Pierre Roustang
Directed by François Truffaut

Stolen Kisses
1968 / Color / 1:66 widescreen / 91 min. / Baisers volés
Starring Jean-Pierre Léaud, Claude Jade, Delphine Seyrig, Michael Lonsdale, Claire Duhamel
Cinematography Denys Clerval
Production Designer Claude Pignot
Film Editor Agnés Guillemot
Original Music Antoine Duhamel
Written by François Truffaut, Claude de Givray and Bernard Revon
Produced by Marcel Berbert
Directed by François Truffaut

Bed and Board
1970 / Color / 1:66 widescreen / 97 min. / Domicile conjugal
Starring Claude Jade, Jean-Pierre Léaud, Hiroko, Barbara Laage, Daniel Ceccaldi, Claire Duhamel
Cinematography Néstor Almendros
Production Designer Jean Mandaroux
Film Editor Agnés Guillemot
Original Music Antoine Duhamel
Written by François Truffaut, Claude de Givray and Bernard Revon
Produced by Marcel Berbert
Directed by François Truffaut

Love on the Run
1979 / Color / 1:66 widescreen / 95 min. / L’amour en fuite
Starring Jean-Pierre Léaud, Claude Jade, Marie-France Pisier, Dani, Dorothée
Cinematography Néstor Almendros
Production Designer Jean-Pierre Kohut-Svelko
Film Editor Martine Barraqué
Original Music Georges Delerue
Written by François Truffaut, Marie-France Pisier, Jean Aurel and Suzanne Schiffman
Produced and Directed by François Truffaut

 

 

The 400 Blows:
Rebellious young Antoine Doinel (Jean-Pierre Léaud) is rejected by his mother and treated roughly by his father. Disobedient in school, he’s caught in lies until he falls into petty crime with a buddy. He’s sent to reform school, but retains his spirit and quietly escapes …

Antoine and Colette:
Still in his teens, Antoine lives alone and works at a record factory. At a concert, he falls madly in love with Colette (Marie-France Pisier) and tries to woo her by moving in next door. Her parents love him, but Colette herself is another story …

Stolen Kisses:
Discharged from the Army almost directly from the stockade, Antoine tries out a number of failed occupations while pursuing a new girlfriend, Christine (Claude Jade). As a detective, he goes to work. undercover at a shoe store, but finds himself getting involved with the owner’s wife (Delphine Seyrig).

Bed and Board:
Now married to Christine and expecting a baby, Antoine nevertheless carries on an affair with a Japanese woman while working for an American company. He and Christine separate, then reunite tentatively.

Love on the Run:
Antoine’s divorce with Christine is final, but he’s having problems with his adorable new girlfriend, Sabine (Dorothée). He also chases after his old flame Colette, after a chance sighting at the train station. Then the three women touch base with one another, and compare notes.

 


 

The French New Wave was a cultural ambush by ambitious, audacious film critics.
 

Prior to 1959, film critic François Truffaut had dabbled in a few short subjects, as had his cohort at the magazine Cahiers du Cinéma Jean-Luc Godard. The Antoine Doinel ‘cycle’ began with The 400 Blows, a one-shot filmed in B&W, in a fresh semi-documentary style. It became known as the first film of the French New Wave; its originality impressed the European film community, with a ‘style’ built around Truffaut’s no-budget limitations.

Truffaut demonstrated a skill with non-actors and children, and a willingness to relax directorial control to allow natural rhythms into his scenes. The 400 Blows has a harsh visual look with a sensitive approach. The 14 year-old Jean-Pierre Léproved an actor with a gift for being unaffected in front of a camera. Through this actor-surrogate, Truffaut has said that he expressed many of his own feelings about his own semi-delinquent childhood.

Three years later François Truffaut needed a subject for Antoine and Colette, his segment of a multi-part omnibus film called Love at Twenty, produced by Pierre Roustang and featuring the work of Truffaut plus Shintarô Ishihara, Marcel Ophüls, Renzo Rossellini and Andrzej Wajda. He decided to return to see what Antoine Doinel was doing, now that he was in his late teens.

Again, Truffaut chose a semi-autobiographical storyline was. His alter-ego’s clumsy attempts to interest the ravishing Colette (Marie-France Pisier) covers an almost identical episode from the director’s own life. The account of how an inexperienced young man mismanages his love affairs is wholly believable. The truth be told, because Doinel is the product of a broken home, he engages better with Colette’s parents than he does with her. The ending will be a surprise to many young male viewers: when it comes to romance, many of us were incapable of seeing things that ought to be obvious.

Six years later in Stolen Kisses Doinel leaves the boundaries of autobiographical reportage to become the center of a coy romantic comedy, complete with soft snowfall and a charming  title song touted on the French poster. It was a big success.

Doinel’s rude exit from the Army mirrors Truffaut’s experience, but he’s soon ensnarled in a light farce about a detective agency, with comic snooping and misbehaving wives. Antoine falls madly in love with Christine (Claude Jade), the first female to respond to his wistful, immature affections. The comic proceedings include impressive contributions from Dephine Seyrig and Michael Lonsdale. Truffaut’s valentine-like film is posed somewhere between the epic romanticism of Jacques Demy, and a more realistic appraisal of human behavior.

Bed and Board shows Doinel married to Christine (Claude Jade again). He’s still refusing to become a part of responsible adult life, cheating on Christine with the ‘exotic’ Kyoko (Hiroko Berghauer) and letting himself be caught in foolish lies.

It’s the least charming and the most painful of the stories. Most of Antoine’s gallic cuteness has worn off, revealing a selfish, unapologetic brat. But Truffaut’s script insists that the little jerk is still irresistible.

(spoilers)

The final film Love on the Run tells a more complicated story. Antoine is newly split from Christine, and has taken up with yet another impossibly lovable female, Sabine (Dorothée). Yet he is ruining his chances with Sabine by impulsively chasing after the newly rediscovered Colette (Marie-France Pisier), the object of his first foolish pursuit, three films previous. Recycled scenes from the older pictures are employed as flashbacks, with all-new material filling in some narrative gaps. It at first feels like a ’roundup episode’ of a television show, until the full pattern emerges.

The realizations of these women reveal Antoine’s flaky true nature. Will he never grow up?  He could have a chance at happiness if he just stopped being so dishonest with women, starting with Sabine. Colette, whose life has gone through its own problems for no fault of her own whatsoever, sees Antoine’s shallowness for what it is. Christine also decides that her love for Antoine will just have to be in the past tense. The film’s wrapup is hopeful, but nothing about Antoine Doinel’s personality is reassuring. He’s still the delinquent street kid stealing what he wants, wherever he can get it.

 


 

We forget that the New Wave directors weren’t all liberated social progressives. Jean-Luc Godard began as politically right-wing, and director François Truffaut’s attracted quite a harem for himself. Two years before Love on the Run Truffaut made The Man Who Loved Women, about a ladies’ man obsessed with his conquests. It’s an even more accurate autobiographical account of a womanizer sans malice. Antoine Doinel is a universal image of a wholly insecure young male, who sometimes feels guilty about his desires and needs, and who tries everything in his pursuit of love except honesty. Truffaut surely loves the women he hires to act in his films, as each is accorded a special respect and concern. They each get their own little corner of character rights. Jean-Pierre Léaud has the harder job of amusing us with his charm, all the while maintaining the reality of incorrigible selfishness.

Whatever the setup, we don’t need to be Truffaut experts to appreciate these actresses, all of whom reveal fascinating personalities behind their beauty. Delicate Claude Jade is much tougher than she looks. Dorothée, formerly a hostess from children’s TV, proves that techniques for handling kindergartners apply well when managing an unreliable young man. Marie-France Pisier was a stunning teenager who became a world-class beauty. Her character is the only one in the story with a heavy-responsibility occupation, and a personal history with some tragic weight.

In the final film, Truffaut brings back memories of Doinel’s mysterious mother, and introduces through flashbacks another problem female, his wife’s best friend Liliane, played by Dani of Day for Night. Truffaut shows an enviable skill for creating sympathetic characters.

Spanning 20 years of French moviedom, the Doinel cycle begins with the rough B&W of the New Wave and ends up in the caressing colors of Néstor Almendros. Savant’s favorite will always be Stolen Kisses, which I saw alone around the time I met my wife. Now it’s a favorite of my adult daughter as well.

 

 

The Criterion Collection’s 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray of The Adventures of Antoine Doinel takes the leap to the fancier format. Is it needed?  Readers aware of the Antoine Doinel films probably don’t need to hear our critical opinions, so we tried to be especially accurate with our visual evaluation.

These 4K remasters reveal Truffaut’s films looking better they ever did, this side of the Atlantic. Even the theatrical export prints were an extra generation or two down from what screened in France. Criterion’s presentation was remastered by MK2 from the films’ original negatives. The two B&W pictures were once very contrasty, with blacks that verged on clogging up; the 4K remasters are still dark but much better than I remember them. The three color features, especially the two shot by Néstor Almendros, have the soft, dreamy look we associate with Eric Rohmer’s color films.

The opening titles of some of the features are more grainy, but the images pop to top quality after the optically-duped material finishes. With the exception of The 400 Blows, the film audio was taken from optical track negatives or magnetic masters. The only jarring thing about the presentations are the opening MK2 logos, with their unwelcome loud audio.

Criterion has presented the set as it was in 2003, on eight separate discs in card and plastic disc holders, one 4K and one Blu-ray disc in each folder. Antoine and Colette shares a disc with The 400 Blows.

Disc producer Curtis Tsui has amended the original extras with a couple of new items; the full list is presented below.

Reviewed by Glenn Erickson


The Adventures of Antoine Doinel
4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray rates:
Movies: François
Video: François
Sound: François
Supplements:
New 4K restoration of Les mistons, Truffaut’s 1957 short film, with commentary by Claude de Givray
Two audio commentaries for The 400 Blows, one featuring Brian Stonehill and the other Robert Lachenay
Archival interviews with Truffaut and his collaborators, including Jean-Pierre Léaud, Claude Jade, Marie-France Pisier, de Givray and Bernard Revon
Video essays by Serge Toubiana for Stolen Kisses and Les mistons
Introducing My Father, François Truffaut, an interview with Laura Truffaut by Daniel Raim (2019)
Trailers
A 48-page illustrated color booklet with essays by Annette Insdorf, Kent Jones, Andrew Sarris, Noah Baumbach, and Chris Fujiwara, plus a 1971 written piece by Truffaut.
Deaf and Hearing-impaired Friendly? YES; Subtitles: English (feature only)
Packaging: Four 4K Ultra HD discs + four Blu-rays in card and plastic disc holders in light card box with the insert booklet
Reviewed:
July 19, 2025
(7359truf)
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Text © Copyright 2025 Glenn Erickson

About Glenn Erickson

Screen Shot 2015-08-24 at 6.51.08 PM

Glenn Erickson left a small town for UCLA film school, where his spooky student movie about a haunted window landed him a job on the CLOSE ENCOUNTERS effects crew. He’s a writer and a film editor experienced in features, TV commercials, Cannon movie trailers, special montages and disc docus. But he’s most proud of finding the lost ending for a famous film noir, that few people knew was missing. Glenn is grateful for Trailers From Hell’s generous offer of a guest reviewing haven for CineSavant.

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