Claude Jutra
Filmmaker
Claude Jutra is the filmmaker who wrote and directed Mon Oncle Antoine (1971), considered by many critics to be the best Canadian movie ever made. Jutra got started in filmmaking as a teenager and his early career was marked by winning awards and prizes in Canada and Europe for documentaries, short films and features, including A Chairy Tale (1957), Le Niger -- Jeune Republique (1961), A tous prendre/Take It All (1963) and Comment Savoir (1966). His acknowledged masterpiece, the coming of age story Mon Oncle Antoine, won eight Canadian Film Awards, including best picture and best director. His next several films were not financially successful, and in the 1980s he was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease. In November of 1986 he disappeared. In March of 1987 his body was found in the St. Lawrence River, an apparent suicide.Four Good Links
Claude Jutra
Career profile and filmography from the Film Reference Library
Claude Jutra
Filmography and accompanying biographical profile
Claude Jutra
His entry from The Canadian Encyclopedia
Claude Jutra: Awards
List of film awards he's received in Canada
Vital Stats
Birth
Birthplace
Death
November 1986
(drowning, age 56)
Best Known As
Director of Mon Oncle Antoine

