Acting
Community Rating
6.4
TMDB estimate
Born
April 15, 1937
Died
December 30, 2003 (age 66)
Born in
Sceaux, Hauts-de-Seine, France
Daniel Pommereulle passed away in December 2003, leaving a very diverse and complexe but also peculiar and premonitory work. According to Alain Jouffroy's phrase, he was associated to the "Objectors" (les "Objecteurs"). Despite some important exhibitions (Fin de siècle presented in 1975 at National Center for Contemporary Art - Georges Pompidou, or the retrospective exhibitions at the Dole and Belfort museums in 1991) and a growing aura, this work, certainly one of the most importants of the second half of the 20th century in France, remains unknown and secret. From the 1980's to the 1990's he concentrates on the transparency theme with layouts of glass, paper and steel. As an actor, he started with Eric Rohmer's La Collectionneuse in 1967 and played in a dozen of movies, among which François Truffau's La mariée était en noir ( The Bride Wore Black), Jean-Luc Godard's Week-End and Les Idoles by Marc'O are noteworthy. In 1972, he takes part in La Cicatrice Intérieure (The Inner Scar) by Philippe Garrel whom he'll join again 27 years later for Le Vent de la nuit(Night Wind).As a film director One More Time (1967) and Vite(Fast, 1969) are the most noticeable movies for which he successively created a suicide machine and shot sequences through a telephoto lens or a telescope, leading to an apology of the desert and the planet Saturn.
Cinématon n°2023 : Daniel Pommereulle
as self
TBA

Nearest to Heaven
as L'éditeur
2002

The Wind of the Night
as Jean le sculpteur
1999

Cinématon
as N°2023
1978

The Inner Scar
as Sheperd
1972
Jupiter
1971

The Pacifist
1970

Vite
as Director, Writer
1969

The Idols
1968

The Bride Wore Black
as L'ami de Fergus
1968

One More Time
as Director, Writer
1968

Weekend
as Joseph Balsamo (uncredited)
1967

La Collectionneuse
as Daniel, Dialogue
1967