
Jean Vigo was a French film director who helped establish poetic realism in film in the 1930s; he was a posthumous influence on the French New Wave of the late 1950s and early 1960s. Vigo was born to Emily Clero and the prominent Catalan militant anarchist Eugeni Bonaventura de Vigo i Sallés (who adopted the name Miguel Almereyda—an anagram of "y'a la merde", which translates as "there's shit"). Much of Jean's early life was spent on the run with his parents. His father was imprisoned and murdered in Fresnes Prison on 13 August 1917. The young Vigo was subsequently sent to boarding school under an assumed name, Jean Sales, to conceal his identity. Vigo is noted for two films that affected the future development of both French and world cinema: Zero for Conduct (1933) and L'Atalante (1934). Zero for Conduct was approvingly described by critic David Thomson as "forty-four minutes of sust…
movieLines of the Hand
2015 · Screenplay
movieJean Vigo : le son retrouvé
2001 · Himself in pictures
Encyclopédie audiovisuelle du cinéma
1978 · Self (archive footage)
movieL'Atalante
1934 · Director, Screenplay, Property Master
movieZero for Conduct
1933 · Director, Writer, Producer, Editor
movieTaris
1931 · Director, Writer, Editor
movieÀ propos de Nice
1930 · Director, Writer, Editor, Producer