Charlet Recors

参加作品

RONIN
Aerial Camera
各国の諜報機関をリストラされた5人の元スパイが、パリに集められた。雇い主も目的も謎のまま、ニースのホテルにいるターゲットから銀色のケースを盗み出すのが、彼らの仕事だ。武器調達の局面で思わぬ襲撃にあうなどのアクシデントに見舞われながら、なんとかニースまで駒を進めた男たち。しかし、チームのひとりに裏切り者が出現し、盗み出したケースは行方不明になる。これを取り戻すべく、アメリカ人のサムと、フランス人のビンセントは、結託して動き出すが……。
Love Life in Luxembourg
Director of Photography
The story of a hotel boss that, from time to time, observes the couples in the rooms and even films them.
Paul
Cinematography
Paul (Jean-Pierre Leaud) leaves his wealthy parents behind to go on a spiritual quest. He meets up with Yvan (Jean-Pierre Kalfon), leader of a vegetarian cult whose members survive by begging for food in uncomfortable robes. The religious fanatics draw the ire of local peasants when they are arrested for stealing eggs. Yvan butchers a goat and has a carnivore carnival orgy on the meat. Marianne (Bernadette Lafont) is one of the followers, and she and Paul go to a remote island to live off seaweed and vegetation, but a development company moves in to wreck the paradise. Paul is brokenhearted when Mariane goes off with one of the greedy developers in this symbolic film that decries the allure of the material world.
Sadistic Hallucinations
Assistant Camera
In a mysterious French castle dark meetings and apparitions happen, seasoned by nauseating erotic menages. The involvement frantically increases up to the amazing epilogue.
Lamiel
Camera Operator
Lamiel (Anna Karina) is a poor orphan girl who climbs her way to the social elite in this 19th-century costume drama. A doctor (Michel Bouquet) lives vicariously through Anna as he oversees the progress of his female protégé. Lamiel finds love with a young thief who steals into her bedroom after her marriage to a penniless count (Jean-Clause Brialy), and the two experience a romantic rendezvous of forbidden love after Lamiel goes from being a poor peasant woman to living a life of comparative luxury.
Bassae
Director of Photography
"I was interested by the fact that some old guy, after the Parthenon’s glamour, devoted himself in a much smaller temple, where there was no white marble, no nothing. All Greek temples are dedicated to Apollo etc, and this particular one was not dedicated to anyone and is in a place where there never was a city nearby, in a kind of wasteland, in a ditch. But, just by going up a bit –you are in the centre of Peloponissos- on a clear day, you can see the sea on both your left and right. I went back there, at least six, seven or eight times, as if I wanted to think or find myself. So, at the temple in Bassae, I made a short 10 minute film and I was lucky enough to encounter two days of clouds and mist between the columns." —ecofilms.gr (Jean-Daniel Pollet, Tours d’horizons, Editions de l’oeil 2005)