Philippe Nicolet
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Philippe Nicolet, born January 4, 1953 in Lausanne, is a Swiss film director of both documentaries and fiction. Journalist and scriptwriter, he was the first editor-in-chief of the Lausanne television station before embarking on a project tracing the history of relations between Switzerland and the European Union for the Jean Monnet Foundation, of which Professor Henri Rieben was the president. In addition to documentary footage filmed in some fifty countries, he became known for his hundreds of interviews of political, scientific and artistic personages. In 2006, Nicolet began creating 3D films.
[edit] Documentaries and fiction
1979-2005: Video portraits. Interviews with personalities from all horizons and from all tendencies: heads of state, astronauts, artists, inventers, etc.
1994: Jeanne Calment, the oldest person in the world
1995: In prison. Docu-fiction on preventive incarceration
1996-1997: Tomorrow perhaps, science-fiction series
1997: Les terriers de la mémoire, documentary on memory.
1998: With Maurice Béjart. Reportage in Italy, Switzerland and Russia.
2000 : The Sign of the Eleventh Hour. Full-length feature film. With Nanou Duggan, Roland Carey, Jean-Pierre Althaus and Annie Chaplin
2001: Three architects of Europe. Interview about the Euro with Jacques Delors, Valéry Giscard d'Estaing and Helmut Schmidt.
2002: Rêveur (Dreamer), a series focusing on the native country of immigrants. The series was granted the patronage of the Swiss Commission for UNESCO in 2004.
2005: Travels in the Orient by the Baron of Aubonne. Documentary on Jean-Baptiste Tavernier.
2007: 3D Odyssey, docu-fiction relating the history of stereoscopy.