Yes, there is the revered name in the very title of the new rom-com: “Jane Austen Wrecked My Life.”

But, as its star Camille Rutherford pointed out, “This is not just a movie for Jane Austen fans. It’s a film we can all relate to, because the character I play” — Agathe, a single Parisian who works in the legendary English language bookstore Shakespeare & Co. which sits on the Left Bank opposite Notre Dame — “she has doubts about everything.

“She feels like an imposter. She struggles with self-confidence and insecurity. She feels that she’s not intelligent and talented and cultivated enough to write a novel.

“That’s something very human. We all have moments in our lives where we feel very depressed, where we’re lost. Where we feel like we’re not useful, we’re not worth anything.

“It’s a movie about that but it’s also a movie about many things. It’s about a character who’s lost, who struggles to do what she likes. We can all relate to that!

“And we know that literature can help us to understand that feeling.”

Rutherford, 35, a rising French star who had a key role in the Oscar-winning 2023 French thriller “Anatomy of a Fall,” has, just like her character Agathe, an English father and French mother.

Agathe’s friend in the bookstore conspires to have her attend a writing workshop, the Jane Austen Residency in England, in the hope that she will be spurred to finish her novel.

Naturally, in Austen’s handsome great-great-great nephew Oliver at the Residency, Agathe meets her “Darcy,” the Mr. Right of her dreams and the hero of “Pride and Prejudice.”

“I like to think that she is very romantic, but it’s not the main thing,” Rutherford emphasized in a Zoom interview. “The main thing is that she wants to finish a novel, and the movie shows that it is not a man that saves her life. It’s not romance that saves her life. She saves herself on her own — because she finally finishes a book.

“Then because she’s proud of herself, she can have a love story with Oliver.”

There are bits of slapstick in this “Jane Austen” with Rutherford scoring Lucille Ball-style comedic pratfalls.

“Oh, that’s the best compliment! I think comedy is very difficult — the most difficult thing actually. When you’re acting comedy, it’s very complicated, and it’s also very subjective.

“We each have our own sense of humor. But actually, that’s the only reason I wanted to be an actress. It was to do comedy. So I really hope I will do more of it.

“But I’m not known for being a funny actress.”

“Jane Austen Wrecked My Life” is in theaters Friday