
Directing
Born July 26, 1948 in Paris, France
Jean-Michel Carré, born July 26, 1948, in Paris, is a French film director, documentary filmmaker, cinematographer, film producer, and screenwriter. Coming from a modest background, he first studied medicine before turning to filmmaking, a passion he cultivated since his adolescence. He attended IDHEC (now La Fémis), where he earned degrees in filmmaking and directing. From the very beginning, Carré was committed to militant and activist filmmaking. In 1968, he made a documentary on Cuba, which was banned from broadcast, marking the beginning of his commitment to denouncing social and political injustices. In 1974, he co-founded the first censored film festival, affirming his desire to bring about social change through his works.

Inside Tibet

China, One Million Artists

Putin: The New Empire

China New Empire : China Awakens

Chine, le nouvel Empire

Les Travailleu(r)ses du Sexe

The Putin System

J'ai (très) mal au travail

Infrarouge

Kursk: A Submarine in Troubled Waters

Drôle de genre

Masculin/Féminin

Tower Opera

Lisa Alisa

Burning Coal

The Battle of Production
Self

Visiblement je vous aime

Galères de femmes

Lest We Forget

The World in Front

Tino

Votre enfant m'intéresse

Alertez les bébés

Ciné regards
Self

Christiania

La mort de l'utopie

Le Ghetto Expérimental