From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
French journalist and film critic
Pascal Mérigeau on 28 November 2014 during the Master Class on
John Boorman in Paris.
Pascal Mérigeau (30 January 1953,
Périgné in
Deux-Sèvres) is a French journalist and film critic.
After studying in
Poitiers, he settled in Paris in 1976 and became a journalist. He worked for film magazines, then for
Les Nouvelles littéraires,
Le Point and
Le Monde, before collaborating to
Le Nouvel Observateur from September 1997.
He participated in the selection of films for the
Cannes Film Festival, currently replaced by Eric Libiot.
A novelist, he also writes short stories, including Quand Angèle fut seule written in 1983.
[a]
- Novels
- Escaliers dérobés, Denoël, 1994
- Max Lang n'est plus ici, Denoël, 1999
- on cinema
- Faye Dunaway, PAC, 1978
- Annie Girardot, PAC, 1978
- Josef Von Sternberg, Edilig, 1983
- Série B (with
Stéphane Bourgoin), Edilig, 1983
- Gene Tierney, Edilig, 1987
- Mankiewicz, Denoël, 1993
- L'aventure vraie de Canal +, with Jacques bayard, 2001
- Maurice Pialat. L'Imprécateur, Grasset, 2003
- Pialat, la rage au cœur, Ramsay, 2007
- Cinéma : autopsie d'un meurtre, Flammarion, 2007
- Depardieu, Flammarion, 2008
- Jean Renoir, Flammarion, 2012
-
^ Published in the magazine
Polar