- Drach, Michel
- (October 18, 1930, Paris, France - February 14, 1990, Neuilly-sur-Seine, France)He studied painting at the Beaux-Arts and briefly was an actor. His cousin, filmmaker Jean-Pierre Melville, hired him as a second assistant director (1949 Le Silence de la Mer; 1950 Les Enfants terribles / USA: The Strange Ones). In 1951, he directed his first short and then created his own film production company, Port-Royal Films. He died of cancer. His former wife was actress Josée-Marie Nat (b. 1940).Filmography1952 ◘ Les Soliloques du Pauvre (short)1955 ◘ La Mer sera haute à Treize Heures (short)1958 ◘ Auditorium / La Boucle (short; also screenwriter, production designer)1960 ◘ On n'enterre pas le Dimanche (also screenwriter, adapter, co-dialogist, co-producer)1963 ◘ Amélie ou Le Temps d'aimer / USA: Amelie or The Time to Love (also screenwriter, adapter, dialogist, co-producer, actor; shot in 1960)◘ La Bonne Occase (also co-producer)◘ Safari Diamant / Fur ein Handvoll Diamanten (also co-adapter, co-producer; France / West Germany)1970 ◘ Elise ou La Vraie Vie (also co-screenwriter, co-adapter, co-producer; France / Algeria)◘ Les Violons du Bal / UK and USA: Violins of the Ball (also screenwriter, dialogist, co-producer, actor)◘ Parlez-moi d'Amour (also co-producer)1977 ◘ Le Passé simple / USA: Replay (also co-screenwriter, co-adapter, co-dialogist, co-producer)1979 ◘ Le Pull-Over rouge (also screenwriter, adapter, dialogist)1982 ◘ Guy de Maupassant (also co-screenwriter, co-adapter, delegate producer)◘ Sauve-toi Lola (also co-screenwriter, co-dialogist)◘ Il est génial Papy! (also co-screenwriter, co-adapter, co-producer)Television Filmography◘ Le Train bleu s'arrête 13 Fois (episodes "Paris: Signal d'Alarme", "Lyon: Marché en Main", "Marseille: Choc en Retour")◘ Le Train bleu s'arrête 13 Fois (episodes "Toulon: Passe-Passe", "Cannes: On ne gagne qu'une Fois")◘ Pes Compagnons de Jéhu (5 X 55' and I X 90')1968 ◘ Les Enquêtes du Commissaire Maigret (episode "L'Inspecteur Cadavre")
Encyclopedia of French film directors . Philippe Rège. 2011.