Fabrice Giger

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fabrice Giger (born January 7, 1965, in Geneva, Switzerland) is a publisher, film producer, and the son of Swiss painter José Giger. He is well known for publishing hundreds of comic books / graphic novels from such acclaimed authors as Alexandro Jodorowsky, Moebius and Enki Bilal, and producing animation series such as Rolie Polie Olie, for which he won an Emmy Award in 2000.

In 1988, at the age of 23, convinced that comic book artists and writers have an artistic and commercial potential far beyond the comic book industry, he bought, the venerable French publishing house Les Humanoïdes Associés. In less than two decades he turned it into a multimedia group, involved not only in comic book publishing, but also in CGI animation, digital effects, internet content and software development.

In 1995 he co-founded the CGI animation studio, Sparx, with branches in France and in Vietnam, which produced many critically acclaimed and awarded shows.

In 1998 in Los Angeles, he founded Humanoids Publishing, the American counterpart of Les Humanoïdes Associés, which later re-launched the magazine Métal Hurlant.

In the years 1999-2000 he partnered with directors Ridley Scott, Tony Scott and Renny Harlin to launch a website featuring original content based mostly on Humanoids books. Hours of material were produced, but because of the end of the internet bubble the site never took off

In the beginning of the millennium, Giger discovered some more major talents including the Ukrainian author Igor Baranko (The Horde) and the writer Jerry Frissen (The Zombies that Ate the World, Lucha Libre). He interrupted his career as publisher and chairman of his group in 2003, in order to concentrate solely on production projects.

He is currently working on several live-action and animation projects, such as the animated feature The Zombies that Ate the World. Giger lives in Los Angeles.

In other languages