François Truffaut's semiautobiographical feature film debut, THE 400 BLOWS, is one of the French New Wave's most loved and enduring masterpieces. Thirteen-year-old Antoine Doinel tries to cope with the various forces tearing his life apart: his parents' contentious marriage (made worse by the confined space of their apartment), his own lack of interest in school, his desire to live like an adult and have pocket money, and his adolescent desire for freedom. Feeling unloved and unwanted at home, Doinel begins to rebel--only to lose what little he already had.




















