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  2. La Fémis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/La_Fémis

    La Fémis is a full member of CILECT, the international network of film schools. The school is now a public establishment under the responsibility of the Ministry of culture and communication. The school first opened in the Palais de Tokyo (Paris 16e), moving on 15 February 1999, to the old Rapid Film - Pathé Studios

  3. École nationale supérieure Louis-Lumière - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/École_nationale...

    The second film school in history, it was founded in 1926 as l'Ecole Technique de Cinématographie et de Photographie on the rue de Vaugirard, under the leadership of personalities such as Louis Lumière and Léon Gaumont. In 2012, the school moved to the Cité du Cinéma in Saint-Denis.

  4. École Internationale de Création Audiovisuelle et de Réalisation

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/École_Internationale_de...

    The school is situated in the heart of France's largest filming studios, in the ICADE Park/ St Denis, Paris North. The graduation at the school in June 2008 was presided over by Claude Lelouch. The International Film School of Paris, EICAR, is a film school and an independent, short-film production house.

  5. Cité du Cinéma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cité_du_Cinéma

    Main entrance. The Cité du Cinéma (French pronunciation: [site dy sinema]) or Studios of Paris is a film studio complex originally supported and founded by the film director and producer Luc Besson, located in Saint-Denis, in the northern suburbs of Paris, in a renovated power plant, commissioned in 1933 to power the Parisian metro. [1]

  6. Lycée La Fontaine (Paris) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lycée_La_Fontaine_(Paris)

    Lycée Jean-de-La-Fontaine is a lycée in the 16th arrondissement of Paris, France. The school building, in the shape of an "open rectangle", was constructed on top of ancient fortifications. Construction began in 1935 and finished in 1938. Towards the end of World War II it was used as an American hospital.

  7. The Eagle with Two Heads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Eagle_with_Two_Heads

    The Eagle with Two Heads (French title L'Aigle à deux têtes) is a 1948 French drama film directed by Jean Cocteau. It was adapted from his own play L'Aigle à deux têtes which was first staged in Paris in October 1946, retaining the principal actors Edwige Feuillère and Jean Marais from the original theatre production. [2]

  8. The School of Flesh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_School_of_Flesh

    The School of Flesh (French: L'École de la chair) is a 1998 French drama film directed by Benoît Jacquot, based on the 1963 novel Nikutai no gakkō by Yukio Mishima. It was entered into the 1998 Cannes Film Festival .

  9. Colonial School, Paris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colonial_School,_Paris

    Façade of the Colonial School building on avenue de l'Observatoire in Paris. The Colonial School (French: École coloniale, also known colloquially as la Colo) was a French public higher education institution or grande école, created in Paris in 1889 to provide training for public servants and administrators of the French colonial empire.