
Jean-Pierre Melville
Directing · Born 1917-10-20 · age 55 at death · Paris, France
Jean-Pierre Grumbach (20 October 1917 – 2 August 1973), known professionally as Jean-Pierre Melville (French: [mɛlvil]), was a French filmmaker. Considered a spiritual father of the French New Wave, he was one of the first fully-independent French filmmakers to achieve commercial and critical success. His works include the crime dramas Bob le flambeur (1956), Le Doulos (1962), Le Samouraï (1967), and Le Cercle Rouge (1970), and the war films Le Silence de la mer (1949) and Army of Shadows (1969). Melville's subject matter and approach to filmmaking was heavily influenced by his service in the French Resistance during World War II, during which he adopted the pseudonym 'Melville' as a tribute to his favorite American author Herman Melville. He kept it as his stage name once the war was over. His sparse, existentialist but stylish approach to film noir and later neo-noir films, many of them in the crime dramas, have been highly influential to future generations of filmmakers. Roger Ebert appraised him as "one of the greatest directors." Description above from the Wikipedia article Jean-Pierre Melville, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Titles

Breathless

Le Samouraï

Army of Shadows

Le Cercle Rouge

Le Doulos

Bob le Flambeur

Orpheus

Un Flic

Le Deuxième Souffle

Léon Morin, Priest

The Good Thief

The Silence of the Sea

The Strange Ones

Two Men in Manhattan

Magnet of Doom

Bluebeard

Sign of the Lion

Le Combat dans l'île

24 Hours in the Life of a Clown

When You Read This Letter

Belmondo: The Incorrigible

Melville, le dernier samouraï

A Girl in a Pocket

Short Cuts : Le Cercle rouge de Jean-Pierre Melville

Their First Films