Confessions d'un Barjo (known as Barjo for the English-language market) is a 1992 French film adaptation of Philip K. Dick's non-science fiction novel Confessions of a Crap Artist, originally written in 1959 and published in 1975, the only non-science fiction novel of Dick's to be published in his lifetime.
The film follows the novel fairly closely, although Jack (played by Hippolyte Girardot) is given the nickname “Barjo” (loosely translated as nutcase) and is referred to by that name throughout the film.
artist | Shaggy (artist) | National Artist of the Philippines | Young Artist Award | National Artist | Robert Irwin (artist) | comic book artist | Allan Ramsay (artist) | The Artist (film) | The Artist | storyboard artist | Lo Nuestro Award for Tropical New Artist of the Year | John Duncan (artist) | A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man | William Keith (artist) | Shakir Ali (artist) | Richard Hamilton (artist) | Prince (artist) | People's Artist of the USSR | Midnight Confessions | Jim Shaw (artist) | Fred Wilson (artist) | Francis Bacon (artist) | Confessions of a Shopaholic (film) | Confessions | Ali Imam (artist) | Sam Wood (artist) | Robert Blackburn (artist) | Richard Long (artist) | People's Artist of Russia |
Under the name Paper Mill Creek, Lagunitas Creek is referred to, and crossed several times by car, in the course of Confessions of a crap artist, the novel by Philip K. Dick, partly set in Marin County.