
Director
Chris Marker
Born 1921 · Neuilly-sur-Seine, Hauts-de-Seine, Île-de-France, France
Christian François Bouche-Villeneuve, better known as Chris Marker (France, 29 July 1921 – 29 July 2012), was a French writer, poet, activist, critic, photographer, traveler, journalist, film essayist, multimedia artist, and documentary filmmaker. He began his career as part of the French Rive Gauche group—parallel to but distinct from the Nouvelle Vague—with which he would later share certain themes and collaborators. Marker is credited with developing the subjective documentary and is considered a pioneer of collective cinema in France. His films are known for their poetic, essayistic, and often experimental qualities, blending a reflective voice with a fascination for memory, art, war, politics, culture, and nature. Over six decades of work, he observed the world with meticulous curiosity, irony, and compassion, continually experimenting with new forms of image manipulation and montage. He was also famously elusive. For many years, few people knew what Chris Marker looked like—he disliked being photographed, and no confirmed portraits were publicly available. He often amused himself by giving contradictory accounts of his life in the rare interviews he granted. As Philippe Dubois observed, “Chris Marker is, in a way, the most celebrated of the unknown filmmakers.” His official website adds: “Rather than a man without qualities, he is a man without biography.” Marker also worked under numerous pseudonyms, including Hayao Yamaneko, Jacopo Berenzini, Kosinki, Michel Krasna, Sandor Krasna, and Guillaume-en-Égypte (his feline avatar), though his best-known identity remains Chris Marker. Among his most significant works are La Jetée (1962), Sans Soleil (1983), Far from Vietnam (1967), A Grin Without a Cat (1977), A.K. (1985), Level Five (1997), and One Day in the Life of Andrei Arsenevich (1999). He also explored interactive and digital media with the CD-ROM Immemory (1997), maintained a website titled Gorgomancy, a YouTube channel called Kosinki, and created a virtual gallery, Ouvroir, within the online world Second Life.
Directed

La Jetée
Director · 1962

Night and Fog
Assistant Director · 1956

Sans Soleil
Director · 1983

The Lovely Month of May
Director · 1963

A Grin Without a Cat
Director · 1977

Statues Also Die
Director · 1953

The Last Bolshevik
Director · 1994

Letter from Siberia
Director · 1957

The Astronauts
Director · 1959

Far from Vietnam
Director · 1967

A. K.
Director · 1985

The Owl's Legacy
Director · 1989

Junkopia
Director · 1981

Three Cheers for the Whale
Director · 1972

Cat Listening to Music
Director · 1988

Description of a Struggle
Director · 1960

Level Five
Director · 1997

The Case of the Grinning Cat
Director · 2006
Acting

Sans Soleil
Self (uncredited) · 1983

The Beaches of Agnès
Self (archive footage) · 2008

Tokyo-Ga
Self (uncredited) · 1985

The Lovely Month of May
Self / Interviewer (voice) · 1963

Letter from Siberia
Stargazer (uncredited) · 1957

A. K.
Self - Narrator (voice) · 1985

Level Five
Self (voice) (uncredited) · 1997

One Day in the Life of Andrei Arsenevich
Self (voice) (uncredited) · 1999

Agnès Varda: From Here to There
Self · 2011

The Koumiko Mystery
Narrator · 1965

May Days
Self · 1978

Kashima Paradise
Narrator (voice) · 1973

In Chris Marker's Studio
Self · 2011

La Traversée du désir
Self · 2009

Tokyo Days
Self (voice) (uncredited) · 1988

Ten Lives of a Cat: A Film about Chris Marker
Kaibyō (archive footage) · 2023

The Invention of Chris Marker
Self · 2020

Nostalgia for the Future
Self (Archive footage) · 2026

Rush - Voyage à Moscou
Self · 1990

Chris Marker: Never Explain, Never Complain
Self (archive footage) · 2015

Lumière Award to Chris Marker
Self · 1962
Writing

Twelve Monkeys
Original Film Writer · 1995

La Jetée
Screenplay · 1962

Night and Fog
Script Editor · 1956

Sans Soleil
Writer · 1983

The Lovely Month of May
Writer · 1963

Valparaiso
Screenplay · 1964

A Grin Without a Cat
Writer · 1977

The Battle of Chile: Part III
Other · 1979

Statues Also Die
Writer · 1953

The Last Bolshevik
Writer · 1994

Letter from Siberia
Writer · 1957

Far from Vietnam
Writer · 1967