
Director
Jean Grémillon
Born 1898 · Bayeux, Calvados, Basse-Normandie, France
Jean Grémillon was a French film director. After directing a number of documentaries during the 1920s, many now lost, Grémillon had his first substantial success with the dramatic feature Maldone in 1928. Over the next quarter-century, he directed twenty more feature films, of which he is best known for five made between 1937 and 1944: Gueule d'amour (1937), L'Étrange M. Victor (1938), Remorques (1941), Lumière d'été (1943), and Le Ciel est à vous (1944), all but the first starring Madeleine Renaud. Grémillon rejected what he referred to as "mechanical naturalism" in favor of "the discovery of that subtlety which the human eye does not perceive directly but which must be shown by establishing the harmonies, the unknown relations, between objects and beings; it is a vivifying, inexhaustible source of images that strike our imaginations and enchant our hearts." He died on November 25, 1959 in Paris, France.
Directed

Stormy Waters
Director · 1941

Lady Killer
Director · 1937

The Woman Who Dared
Director · 1944

The Lighthouse Keepers
Director · 1929
Astrology or the mirror of life
Director · 1952
La vie des travailleurs italiens en France
Director · 1926

The Strange Monsieur Victor
Director · 1938

Summer Light
Director · 1943

Misdeal
Director · 1928

The Love of a Woman
Director · 1953

Dainah the Mixed
Director · 1932
Les désastres de la guerre
Director · 1949

The Royal Waltz
Director · 1936
La photogénie mécanique
Director · 1924

The House of Images
Director · 1955

André Masson and the Four Elements
Director · 1958

Alchemy
Director · 1952

Little Lise
Director · 1930
Acting
Writing

The Love of a Woman
Dialogue · 1953

André Masson and the Four Elements
Screenplay · 1958

Alchemy
Writer · 1952

The Sixth of June at Dawn
Writer · 1947

Gonzague
Screenplay · 1934
Un tour au large
Writer · 1926

La Dolorosa
Writer · 1934

The Charms of Life
Screenplay · 1949
Essais au bord de la mer
Writer · 1926
Casting Ella Maillart
Writer · 1926