
Jean-Claude Brisseau
Born: 1944-07-17
Place of birth: Paris, France
Jean-Claude Brisseau (17 July 1944 – 11 May 2019) was a French filmmaker best known for his 2002 film Secret Things ("Choses Secrètes") and his 2006 film The Exterminating Angels ("Les Anges exterminateurs"). His film Céline was nominated for the Golden Bear Award at the 42nd Berlin International Film Festival. At the Cannes Film Festival, he was awarded the France Culture Award in 2003 for Secret Things; in 1988 he was awarded the Special Award for the Youth. In 2002, Brisseau was arrested on charges of sexual harassment after three women came forward accusing him of cajoling them into performing sexual acts on camera by promising them a film role. He was eventually found guilty, fined and given a suspended one-year prison sentence. Brisseau made a semi-autobiographical film in 2006 about this incident, Les Anges Exterminateurs. He was formerly a professor at La Fémis in Paris. Brisseau died in Paris on 11 May 2019 at the age of 74. Description above from the Wikipedia article Jean-Claude Brisseau, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.
Filmography

Spécial cinéma
1974

Shadows
1982

Four Adventures of Reinette and Mirabelle
1987

Des jeunes femmes disparaissent
1976

Sound and Fury
1988

Céline
1992

White Wedding
1989

Des jeunes femmes disparaissent
1972

A Brutal Game
1983

Life the Way It Is
1978

Secret Things
2002

The Girl from Nowhere
2013

Workers for the Good Lord
2000

The Black Angel
1994

The Exterminating Angels
2006

The Interchange
1982

On n'est pas couché
2006