Director Jean-Charles Tacchella with Marie-Christine Barrault who starred in his Cousin, Cousine Photo: UniFrance |
He was a dedicated film buff who confided in his book Mémoires, that: “At 11 years old I saw every film that came out; at 13 I made the decision that I would devote my whole life to The Seventh Art.”
He was a discreet and elegant filmmaker whose subtle comedy of manners Cousin, Cousine proved a huge hit in the States where it was Oscar-nominated. The film dealt delicately with a pair of distant cousins who meet at a wedding and develop a friendship so deep that their spouses become suspicious. He also received the Prix Delluc for the best French film of its year - 1975. At the time he said he was delighted to be associated with Delluc whom he described as the first French film-maker to set out to make “cinéma d’auteur.” He was probably less delighted with the US remake - made in 1989 and titled Cousins withTed Danson and Isabella Rossellini.
Marie-Christine Barrault and Victor Lanoux in Cousin, Cousine, an international hit in the Seventies Photo: UniFrance |
With a group of friends, including René Clément and André Bazin he founded the film club Objectif 49 whose president was Jean Cocteau and which became a cradle for the birth of the New Wave.
From 1955 to 1962 he worked mainly as a script writer and signed a first draft of Gérard Oury’s hit La Grande Vadrouille. With his first short film as a director Les Derniers Hivers he won the Jean-Vigo prize in 1971. Two years later at the age of 50 he embarked on his feature film career with Voyage en Grande Tartarie with Jean-Luc Bideau.
His notable successes included: Blue Country (Le Pays Bleu) (1977, with Brigitte Fossey), Silver Anniversary (Il Y A Longtemps Que Je t'Aime) (1979, with Jean Carmet) and Croque la vie (1981, starring Carole Laure and Bernard Giraudeau). He scored considerable success in 1985 with Escalier C starring Robin Renucci and Jean-Pierre Bacri, which received two César nominations and recounted several interlinking stories of the residents of a Parisian apartment block. Two years later he made Travelling Avant, about his own adolescence and love for cinema, with Thierry Frémont, Ann-Gisel Glass and Simon La Brosse.
Tacchella was a former president of the French Cinématheque.