FILM DIRECTOR

Alain Guiraudie

1964 - Today

Photo of Alain Guiraudie

Icon of person Alain Guiraudie

Alain Guiraudie (French: [giʁodi]; born 15 July 1964) is a French film director and screenwriter. He has directed ten mostly LGBT-related films since 1990. He is openly gay. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Alain Guiraudie is the 1,222nd most popular film director (up from 1,607th in 2019), the 4,795th most popular biography from France (up from 5,273rd in 2019) and the 138th most popular French Film Director.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Alain Guiraudie by language

Loading...

Among FILM DIRECTORS

Among film directors, Alain Guiraudie ranks 1,222 out of 2,041Before him are Archie Mayo, Rex Ingram, Dariusz Wolski, Marc Caro, Alain Jessua, and Tay Garnett. After him are Daniel Mann, Travis Knight, Richard Kelly, Peter Del Monte, Vadim Perelman, and Walter Murch.

Most Popular Film Directors in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1964, Alain Guiraudie ranks 303Before him are Miroslav Kadlec, Augusto Paolo Lojudice, Iliana Iotova, Stephen Colbert, Musashi Mizushima, and Zeid Raad Al Hussein. After him are Jorge Drexler, Joanne Harris, Vivica A. Fox, Fernando De Napoli, Guru Josh, and Rose Christiane Raponda.

Others Born in 1964

Go to all Rankings

In France

Among people born in France, Alain Guiraudie ranks 4,795 out of 6,770Before him are Fernand Decanali (1925), Alain Jessua (1932), Christian Tissier (1951), Bernard Baudoux (1928), Didier Lockwood (1956), and Robert Spencer, 2nd Earl of Sunderland (1641). After him are Bernard Le Coq (1950), Isabelle Nanty (1962), Olivier Grouillard (1958), Georges Spénale (1913), René Benjamin (1885), and Bruno Génésio (1966).

Among FILM DIRECTORS In France

Among film directors born in France, Alain Guiraudie ranks 138Before him are Jacques Baratier (1918), Francis Girod (1944), Denys de La Patellière (1921), Raymond Depardon (1942), Marc Caro (1956), and Alain Jessua (1932). After him are Gilles Grangier (1911), George Fitzmaurice (1885), Jacques Rouffio (1928), Laurent Cantet (1961), Christian de Chalonge (1937), and Arnaud Desplechin (1960).