Anne Fontaine
Anne Fontaine (born in Luxembourg, 1959) is a filmmaker and screenwriter who used to be an actor. She lives and works in France.
Born Fontaine Sibertin-Blanc, sister of actor Jean-Chrétien Sibertin-Blanc, she went as a young child to live in Lisbon, where her father, Antoine Sibertin-Blanc, is a music professor and cathedral organist. In adolescence she moved to Paris and trained in dance with Joseph Russillo while continuing her academic education, including philosophy. Her husband is Philippe Carcassonne, the film producer, and they have an adopted son who was born in Vietnam.
While still dancing, she was picked by Robert Hossein to play Esmeralda in a 1980 theatrical production of The Hunchback of Notre Dame and around this time started to use the name Anne Fontaine. She continued with acting and became known for her roles in comedies like Si ma gueule vous plaßt... (1981) and P.R.O.F.S.(1985). An opportunity to be assistant director came with a 1986 stage version of Céline's Voyage au bout de la nuit (Journey to the End of the Night) at the Renaud-Barrault theatre.
Fontaine's first project as solo director, Les histoires d'amour finissent mal... en général (Love Affairs Usually End Badly), won the 1993 Prix Jean Vigo (prize). In 1995, she worked with her brother on the comic Augustin. Two years later, she wrote and directed the successful Nettoyage à Sec (Dry Cleaning). This won the Best Screenplay award at the Venice Film Festival 1997 and is generally considered a milestone on Fontaine's way to becoming "an important figure in contemporary French cinema".
In 1999 the character Augustin (Jean-Chrétien Sibertin-Blanc) re-appeared in Fontaine's film Augustin, Roi Du Kung-Fu (Augustin, King of Kung-Fu). Comment j'ai tué mon pÚre (How I Killed My Father) was released in 2001, and Nathalie... followed in 2003. The 2005 film, Entre Ses Mains (In His Hands) has been widely described as a thriller: an "intimate thriller" according to Fontaine herself. A third Augustin film, Nouvelle chance (also known as Oh La La) was released in 2006. Then came La fille de Monaco (The Girl From Monaco) in 2008 and Coco avant Chanel (Coco Before Chanel), her biopic of Coco Chanel, in 2009.
Fontaine's work is not easily categorised, though the phrase "psychological drama" is often used. She told a UK newspaper, "I try to work on my characters' blind side, in a kind of Freudian way: to ask, 'What are the things about themselves that they're unaware of?' I'm fascinated by the irony of fate, when something goes into a skid. All my stories have an element of cruelty in them."
Description above from the Wikipedia article Anne Fontaine (filmmaker), licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Tender Cousins

Keep It Quiet

The Last Romantic Lover

P.R.O.F.S.

Be Natural: The Untold Story of Alice Guy-Blaché
A Day in the Life of French Cinema

Si ma gueule vous plaĂźt...

Les MystĂšres de Paris

Vivement dimanche

Softly from Paris

Softly from Paris

Vidéo Club

Coco Before Chanel

Coco Before Chanel

Dry Cleaning

Dry Cleaning

How I Killed My Father

Augustin

In His Hands

The Girl from Monaco

Augustin, King of Kung-Fu

Nathalie...
Love Affairs Usually End Badly

Nouvelle chance

Nouvelle chance

My Worst Nightmare

Augustin

Adore
Monique et Matisse

Love Reinvented

Love Reinvented

Gemma Bovery

Chloe
Monique et Matisse

Gemma Bovery

Boléro

Boléro

My Worst Nightmare

The Innocents

Nathalie...

The Innocents

The Girl from Monaco

Reinventing Marvin

Reinventing Marvin

In His Hands

The Innocents

White as Snow

How I Killed My Father

Night Hustler

White as Snow

Night Shift

Night Shift

Presidents

Augustin, King of Kung-Fu
