The film writer, director and producer Jean-Pierre Jeunet, was born on September 3, 1953 in the city of Roanne (Loire), in France.
Jeunet He is a self-taught director who was interested in cinema from a young age, with a predilection for the fantasy genre. He began his career directing short films, artistic videos and commercials. Around that time he met the designer and cartoonist Marc Caro, with whom he made two animation shorts: “L’évasion“(1978) and”Le Manège“(1980), the latter winner of a César for best short film.
After this success Jeunet and Caro spent more than a year together, projecting every detail (set, costumes, production design) of their third short film: “Le bunker de la dernière rafale“(1981), a film that combined science fiction and heroic fantasy, in a visually delusional story about the growing paranoia of soldiers trapped underground. With that film they garnered several awards in France. This film also marked their first collaboration with Gilles Adrien who would later write the scripts for two of his feature films.
His next works were two short films (this time without the collaboration of Caro) “Pas de repos pour Billy Brakko“(1984) and”Foutaises“(1989). Both works won numerous awards in France and abroad, plus a second César for”Foutaises“(1989).
In 1996, he released “The lost City“(1996), which did not achieve great success, although the director’s distinctive style did not leave indifferent the Hollywood producers who commissioned him the fourth installment of the” Alien “saga. In 1997” Aliens resurreccion “had a good success and relaunched the series, which had declined with the third episode.
Already in 2009 he premiered “Micmacs à tire-larigot“(” Micmacs “, in Spanish), a criminal action comedy, about a man who, with the help of a group of street artists, tries to destroy the arms industry.
In his personal life, Jeunet He has been married since 1997 to editor and producer Liza Sullivan.