
Director
Marcel L'Herbier
Born 1888 · Paris, France
Marcel L'Herbier (1888-1979) was a French filmmaker who achieved prominence as an avant-garde theorist and imaginative practitioner with a series of silent films in the 1920s. His career as a director continued until the 1950s and he made more than 40 feature films in total. During the 1950s and 1960s, he worked on cultural programmes for French television. He also fulfilled many administrative roles in the French film industry, and he was the founder and the first President of the French film school Institut des hautes études cinématographiques (IDHEC). In 1921, only three years after his first film, Marcel L'Herbier was voted by readers of a French film magazine as the best French director. In the following year, the critic Léon Moussinac marked him as one of the filmmakers whose work was most important for the future of cinema. In this period, L'Herbier was linked with filmmakers such as Abel Gance, Germaine Dulac and Louis Delluc as part of a "first avant-garde" (Impressionism) in French cinema, the first generation to think spontaneously in animated images.
Directed

L'Argent
Director · 1928

The Inhuman Woman
Director · 1924

The Late Mathias Pascal
Director · 1925

The Citadel of Silence
Director · 1937

Princely Nights
Director · 1929

The Hawk
Director · 1933

Land of Fire
Director · 1939

Don Juan et Faust
Director · 1922

El Dorado
Director · 1921

Le Bonheur
Director · 1934

Rose-France
Director · 1919

Fantastic Night
Director · 1942

Comedy of Happiness
Director · 1940

Savage Brigade
Director · 1939

The Great Temptation
Director · 1936
Résurrection
Director · 1923

La Mode rêvée
Director · 1940

Sacrifice of Honor
Director · 1935
Acting
Writing

L'Argent
Writer · 1928

The Inhuman Woman
Scenario Writer · 1924

The Late Mathias Pascal
Writer · 1925

Princely Nights
Screenplay · 1929

The Hawk
Writer · 1933

Don Juan et Faust
Screenplay · 1922

El Dorado
Writer · 1921

Le Bonheur
Writer · 1934

Rose-France
Writer · 1919

Infatuation
Scenario Writer · 1918

The Blindness of Youth
Screenplay · 1917

Fantastic Night
Adaptation · 1942
