Chris Marker

Directing

Born: 1921-07-29
Died: 2012-07-29
From: Neuilly-sur-Seine, Hauts-de-Seine, Île-de-France, France
Gender: Male
Popularity: 0.5

Also Known As

크리스 마르케Крис Маркерクリス・マルケルChristian Bouche-VilleneuveChristian François Bouche-VilleneuveJacopo BerenziniMichel KrasnaSandor Krasna

Biography

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.

Photos11

Awards & Nominations3 won · 3 nominated

Nominated

Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation

12 Monkeys

1996
🏆 Won

César Award for Best Documentary Short Film

1983
🏆 Won

Sutherland Trophy

Sans Soleil

1983
Nominated

César Award for Best Documentary Short Film

1983
Nominated

César Award for Best Editing

A Grin Without a Cat

1978
🏆 Won

Louis Delluc Prize

Moi, un noir

1958

Acting22 titles

Directing66 titles

Writing50 titles

Production6 titles

Camera13 titles

Sound6 titles

Editing25 titles

Visual Effects1 title

Crew5 titles

Creator2 titles