SmartAnswer
Smart answer:
After reading 1972 websites, we found 20 different results for "Who is the director of Marie Antoinette"
Sofia Coppola
()}}; While directing Marie Antoinette, Sofia Coppola stood amongst white powdered wigs, embellished corsets, and plenty of pink robes à la française wearing a black zip-up skeleton hoodie.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
Jean Delannoy
Marie Antoinette Queen of France Marie Antoinette Queen of France ( and also known as Shadow of the Guillotine) is a French language motion picture historical drama directed by Jean Delannoy who co-wrote screenplay with Pierre Erlanger and Bernard Zimmer.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
Confidence Score
Olivier le Daim
French director and screenwriter Olivier le Daim (c. 1428–1484), born Olivier de Neckere, Flemish valet to King Louis XI of France
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
Confidence Score
Jacques Audiard
The director of the movie is Jacques Audiard and produced by Rosa Attab, Michael De Luca, Allison Dickey and John C. Reilly.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
Marion Cottilard
The film is written and directed by French film Oscar winner who led Marion Cottilard to Marion Cottilard's Oscar win for La Vie en Rose.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
Olivier Dahan
The director is Olivier Dahan, and Marion Cotillard plays the title role.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
Jacques Rivet
The current director is Jacques Rivet and deputy director is Bernard Delaître.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
Valerie Lemercier
Valerie Lemercier, a French artist, will be at the helm of the film as both director and lead actress.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
Confidence Score
Jean Renoir, Vincente Minnelli, Claude Chabrol
Jean Renoir, Vincente Minnelli, Claude Chabrol are just some of the directors that dealt with the book, up to the very recent and still not distributed version of Sophie Barthes with Mia Wasikowska.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
Confidence Score
by Van Dyke,
Marie-Antoinette (1938) is a lazy hotchpotch directed by Van Dyke, decorated by Gibbons and with Shearer mincing about in the lead, and King Without A Crown (1937) is an educational short film, directed by Jacques Tourneur and probably concocted on the basis of Jack Conway’s Tale of Two Cities (1935).
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
Jean-Paul Salomé
Jean-Paul Salomé, the director, drew inspiration from an obituary in The Times newspaper of Lise de Baissac (Lise Villameur), from Mauritius (then a British colony), one of the heroines of the SOE, named "Louise Desfontaines" in the film and played by Sophie Marceau.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
Jean-Paul Rouve
The film was written and directed by and stars Jean-Paul Rouve, Patrick Chesnais, Arnaud Ducret, Baptiste Lecaplain, Stéfi Celma, Judith El Zein, Natacha Lindinger, Alice David, Zoé Duchesne, Claudia Tagbo, and Maurice Barthélemy among others.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
Agnès Varda
Agnès Varda (b. 1928, Ixelles, Belgium) is without doubt the most significant woman director in the history of French cinema.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
Maurice Tourneur
The movie was directed by Maurice Tourneur, based on novel Princesse Mathe Bibesco by Marthe Bibesco under the pseudonym Lucile Decaux.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
Colin Creedon
The directors are Yvonne Bailey, Teresa Bailey, Anne Gleeson and Colin Creedon.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
Julien Duvivier
Directing was the great French director Julien Duvivier, known as one of the role models for French New Wave filmmaker Jean Renoir.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score