Patrick Chauvel

Last updated
Patrick Chauvel-Salon du livre en Bretagne 2012.jpg

Patrick Chauvel (born 1949 in France) is an independent war photographer whose career began when he was just 17 years old. [1]

Contents

He has covered more than twenty conflicts all over the world, including the Six-Day War and the Vietnam War. In 1995 he was awarded the World Press Photo commendation for Spot News Stories for his coverage of the Battle of Grozny during the First Chechen War. [2]

He is also author of some documentary movies. [3]

On 21 December 1989 during the Invasion of Panama he was critically wounded to the belly by two rounds shot by Marines; Juan Antonio Rodriguez (El Pais) was killed. [4]

After the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, he allegedly saw time stamped photographs from a speed camera showing the Mercedes entering the fatal tunnel. [5] [6]

Author of two books in French, the autobiographical Rapporteur de Guerre (2003) and the novel Sky (2005).

Also participated in 24h.com-neo media projects [7] and in the Condition One project.

Documentary Films

Publications

Filmography (actor)

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Henri Bourassa</span> Canadian politician

Joseph-Napoléon-Henri Bourassa was a French Canadian political leader and publisher. In 1899, Bourassa was outspoken against the British government's request for Canada to send a militia to fight for Britain in the Second Boer War. Prime Minister Sir Wilfrid Laurier's compromise was to send a volunteer force, but the seeds were sown for future conscription protests during the World Wars of the next half-century. Bourassa unsuccessfully challenged the proposal to build warships to help protect the empire. He led the opposition to conscription during World War I and argued that Canada's interests were not at stake. He opposed Catholic bishops who defended military support of Britain and its allies. Bourassa was an ideological father of French-Canadian nationalism. Bourassa was also a defining force in forging French Canada's attitude to the Canadian Confederation of 1867.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pierre Schoendoerffer</span> French film director (1928–2012)

Pierre Schoendoerffer was a French film director, a screenwriter, a writer, a war reporter, a war cameraman, a renowned First Indochina War veteran, a cinema academician. He was president of the Académie des Beaux-Arts for 2001 and for 2007.

<i>Antoine</i> (film) 2008 Canadian film

Antoine is a 2008 Canadian documentary film directed by Laura Bari. The film features a 5-year old blind boy named Antoine Houang, living in Montreal, Quebec. It tells the real and imaginary life of Antoine, a boy detective who runs, drives, makes decisions, hosts radio shows and adores simultaneous telephone conversations. Over the course of two years, he uses a mini-boom microphone to discover and capture the sounds surrounding him. In this manner he also co-created the soundtrack of the film.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Montreal International Documentary Festival</span>

The Montreal International Documentary Festival is a Canadian documentary film festival, staged annually in Montreal, Quebec.

Magnus Isacsson was a Canadian documentary filmmaker whose films investigated contemporary political issues and topics in social activism.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lixin Fan</span> Chinese-born Canadian documentary film director

Lixin Fan is a Montreal, Quebec, Canada-based documentary film director with the Canadian production company EyeSteelFilm and previously a producer/journalist at China's state broadcaster CCTV.

Raphaël Millet is a French writer, critic, producer and director of cinema and television, as well as an organiser and programmer of photographic and cultural events.

Nous, princesses de Clèves is a French documentary film directed by Régis Sauder, filmed at the Lycée Diderot and released on 3 March 2011.

Letters from Pyongyang is a 2012 documentary short film about the filmmaker's search for lost relatives in North Korea, directed by Korean-Canadian filmmaker Jason Lee. The film premiered at the Rencontres internationales du documentaire de Montreal also known by its acronym RIDM on 13 November 2012. The international premiere in Doha, Qatar during the 9th Aljazeera International Documentary Film Festival garnered the film the top juried prize, the Aljazeera Golden Award, in the short film category.

Parabola Films is a Montreal-based Canadian cinema production company founded by Sarah Spring and Selin Murat, a documentary filmmaker. Parabola Films focuses on the production of videos which demonstrate the role of cinema in social change. The company collaborates with other film-making organizations who emphasize storytelling.

Wavemakers is a 2012 Quebec documentary film about the Ondes Martenot, directed by Caroline Martel.

<i>Homeland: Iraq Year Zero</i> 2015 Iraqi film

Homeland: Iraq Year Zero is a 2015 documentary film written and directed by the Iraqi-French film director Abbas Fahdel.

The Unknown Photographer is a 2015 Quebec virtual reality work based around found photographs of World War I, co-produced by the digital production agency Turbulent and the National Film Board of Canada's French-language Digital Studio, both located in Montreal. The lead artists on the project were Loïc Suty, Osman Zeki and Claudine Matte. The work was produced by Claire Buffet and Louis-Richard Tremblay, with executive producers Marc Beaudet, Benoit Beauséjour and Hugues Sweeney.

<i>Callshop Istanbul</i> 2015 Canadian film

Callshop Istanbul is a 2015 documentary film by two film directors, the Moroccan-Canadian Hind Benchekroun and Turkish-Kurdish-Canadian Sami Mermer and produced by Turtle Films, depicting some intimate footage of the life of immigrants and of undocumented street vendors residing in cosmopolitan Istanbul. Many migrants and refugees mainly from Asia, Africa and the Arab World found temporary refuge in Istanbul considering it as their gateway to Europe and elsewhere. To cater for a great demand of communication, telephone and internet access by refugees, a booming network of "call shops" and "internet cafés" spread all over Istanbul to provide an affordable way for these refugees from all over the world to communicate with their relatives back home or for facilitating their life in the city or to help them in their plans to immigrate elsewhere. The film portrays often one-way phone conversations by the refugees in their most intimate and vulnerable moments. The film is also a subtle witness of the complicated role of Istanbul as a transcontinental city including proliferation of would-be smugglers and traffickers promising shady and often dangerous routes for immigration to Europe with Istanbul serving as a passageway for the 21st century's largest migration crisis.

<i>Gulîstan, Land of Roses</i> 2016 documentary film by Zayne Akyol

Gulîstan, Land of Roses is a 2016 feature-length documentary film about women guerillas in a Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) Free Women's Unit, in combat against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, directed by the Kurdish Montreal filmmaker Zaynê Akyol. Shot in Iraqi Kurdistan, the film is co-produced Montreal's Périphéria Productions, Germany's MitosFilm and the National Film Board of Canada.

<i>All That We Make</i> 2013 Canadian film

All That We Make is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Annie St-Pierre and released in 2013. The film profiles four women associated with the Cercles de fermières du Québec, a provincewide network of local organizations for women involved in farming.

Wilcox is a Canadian drama film, directed by Denis Côté and released in 2019. Told entirely without dialogue, the film tells the story of Wilcox, a mysterious drifter travelling in an apparent search for adventure. Although he does interact with other characters in the film, the dialogue taking place in the story is not heard by the audience.

Céline Baril is a Canadian artist and film director.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Yan Morvan</span> French photographer

Yan Morvan is a French photographer, journalist, photojournalist and author particularly recognized for his war photography and images of underground communities.

<i>Little Girl</i> (film) French documentary film

Little Girl is a 2020 French documentary film written and directed by Sébastien Lifshitz. The cinematography was by Paul Guilhaume, and the editing was by Pauline Gaillard. It focuses on the story of transgender seven-year-old Sasha, who was assigned male at birth but has known she is a girl since the age of four. She sees a psychiatrist with a special interest in gender who diagnosis her with gender dysphoria. The documentary follows the difficulty Sasha and her family face in helping her transition in provincial France.

References

  1. "Interview With War Photographer Patrick Chauvel". History Net. World History Group. 7 September 2012. Retrieved 26 February 2016.
  2. World Press Photo: 1995, Patrick Chauvel, 1st prize, Spot News stories
  3. "Rencontres internationales du documentaire de Montréal (RIDM): Listings". Archived from the original on 2007-09-28.
  4. Truth needs no ally: inside photojournalism pp316-317
  5. Botham, Noel (2004). The Murder of Princess Diana (reissue ed.). Kensington Pub. Corp. p. 240. ISBN   978-0-7860-0700-4 . Retrieved 2009-09-10.
  6. Morgan, John (2008). Cover-up of a Royal Murder: Hundreds of Errors in the Paget Report. Lulu.com. p. 279. ISBN   978-1-84753-655-6.
  7. "24h.com Patrick Chauvel". Archived from the original on 2011-09-19. Retrieved 2011-09-10.
  8. "Rencontres internationales du documentaire de Montréal (RIDM): Patrick Chauvel". 2003. Archived from the original on May 23, 2009. Retrieved 2009-09-10.

Further reading

Chapnick, Howard (1997). Truth needs no ally: inside photojournalism (illustrated). University of Missouri Press. p. 369. ISBN   978-0-8262-0955-9 . Retrieved 2009-09-10.