
Gilles Jacob
Darsteller, Produzent, Regie
22. Juni 1930 (95 Jahre)
Gilles Jacob (born 22 June 1930) is a French film critic and essayist, who served as president of the Cannes Film Festival between 2001 and 2014.
Born in Paris, the son of an entrepreneur, Jacob studied at the Lycée Louis-le-Grand, having Claude Chabrol as a schoolmate. At 17 years old he co-founded a short-lived cinema magazine, Raccords. He then collaborated as a film critic and journalist with several publications, including Cinéma, Les Nouvelles littéraires and L'Express.
In 1976 he was named deputy delegate general of the Cannes Film Festival, before becoming delegate general in 1978, and finally becoming president of the festival from 2001 to 2014. He stayed in the festival's board of directors until 2018, and since then he served as member of the General Assembly of the festival. Among his initiatives, were the foundation of the Un Certain Regard selection, the Caméra d'Or award, and the Cinéfondation.
During his career Jacob received various honours and accolades, notably the Legion of Honour.[4] He served as a juror at the 47th Venice International Film Festival.
Source: Article "Gilles Jacob" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.
Born in Paris, the son of an entrepreneur, Jacob studied at the Lycée Louis-le-Grand, having Claude Chabrol as a schoolmate. At 17 years old he co-founded a short-lived cinema magazine, Raccords. He then collaborated as a film critic and journalist with several publications, including Cinéma, Les Nouvelles littéraires and L'Express.
In 1976 he was named deputy delegate general of the Cannes Film Festival, before becoming delegate general in 1978, and finally becoming president of the festival from 2001 to 2014. He stayed in the festival's board of directors until 2018, and since then he served as member of the General Assembly of the festival. Among his initiatives, were the foundation of the Un Certain Regard selection, the Caméra d'Or award, and the Cinéfondation.
During his career Jacob received various honours and accolades, notably the Legion of Honour.[4] He served as a juror at the 47th Venice International Film Festival.
Source: Article "Gilles Jacob" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.
Filmography
| 2002 | Femme Fatale · as Cannes Film Festival Participant |
| 2025 | Citizen B · as Self |
| 2024 | Claude Lelouch La vie en mieux · as Self |
| 2024 | Le cinéma de Jean-Pierre Léaud · as Self |
| 2022 | Alain Resnais, l'audacieux · as Self |
| 2021 | Morceaux de Cannes · as Self |
| 2017 | Saura(s) · as Self |
| 2017 | The Legend of the Ugly King · as Self |
| 2016 | Water and Sugar · as Self |
| 2016 | |
| 2014 | Face to Face · as Self |
| 2014 | Mr. X, a Vision of Leos Carax · as Self |
| 2012 | Cinephiles of Our Time · as Self |
| 2012 | 28 minutes · as Self |
| 2010 | Hitler in Hollywood · as Gilles Jacob |
| 2009 | C à Vous · as Self |
| 2008 | La Grande Librairie · as Self |
| 2007 | 100 Films and a Funeral · as Self |
| 2007 | Manufacturing Dissent · as Self |
| 2007 | Pierre Rissient: Man of Cinema · as Self |
| 2006 | Ce soir (ou jamais !) · as Self |
| 2006 | On n'est pas couché · as Self |
| 2004 | Le grand journal de Canal+ · as Self |
| 2004 | Words in Progress · as Self |
| 2000 | L'invité · as Self |
| 1998 | Roll on Sunday · as Self |
| 1995 | Metropolis · as Self |
| 1994 | Dead Tired · as Gilles Jacob |
| 1976 | César Awards · as Self |
| 1975 | Sunday meetings · as Self |
| 1985 | Ça n'arrive qu'à moi · as Scenario Writer |


