Philippe Fourastié
An image from The Nun, one of the productions that also features Philippe Fourastié.

Philippe Fourastié

January 14, 1940 — Cabourg, Calvados, France

Philippe Fourastié was a French film director and screenwriter known for his contributions to French cinema in the 1960s and 1970s. He began his career as an assistant director, collaborating with notable filmmakers such as Pierre Schoendoerffer on La 317e Section (1965), Claude Chabrol on Marie-Chantal contre docteur Kha (1965), Jean-Luc Godard on Pierrot le fou (1965), and Jacques Rivette on La Religieuse (1966). Fourastié made his directorial debut with Un choix d'assassins (1966), followed by La Bande à Bonnot (1968), which depicted the life of anarchist Jules Bonnot and featured actors Bruno Cremer, Jacques Brel, and Annie Girardot. He also directed the television miniseries Mandrin (1972), focusing on the 18th-century bandit. Fourastié passed away in Tréguier, Côtes-d'Armor, France, at the age of 42.

Pierrot le Fou

Pierrot le Fou

1965

The Nun

The Nun

1966

The Blue Panther

The Blue Panther

1965

Bonnot's Gang

Bonnot's Gang

1968

Living Together

Living Together

1973

Les Gauloises bleues

1969

Mandrin

Mandrin

1972

A Choice of Killers

A Choice of Killers

1967