Raymond Bernard (10 October 1891 – 12 December 1977) was a French film director and screenwriter whose career spanned more than forty years. He is best remembered for several large-scale historical productions, including the silent films Le Miracle des loups (The Miracle of the Wolves) and Le Joueur d'échecs (The Chess Player) and in the 1930s Les Croix de bois (Wooden Crosses) and a highly regarded adaptation of Les Misérables.
Wooden Crosses
(Director)
Faubourg Montmartre
(Adaptation)
Faubourg Montmartre
(Director)
Les Misérables
(Director)
Les Misérables
(Writer)
The Cape of Hope
(Director)
Marthe Richard
(Director)
Tartarin of Tarascon
(Director)
The Chess Player
(Director)
La belle de Cadix
(Writer)
La belle de Cadix
(Director)
Triplepatte
(Director)
Miracle of the Wolves
(Director)
Anne-Marie
(Director)
Tarakanova
(Director)
I Was an Adventuress
(Director)
A Friend Will Come Tonight
(Director)
A Friend Will Come Tonight
(Writer)
Judgement of God
(Writer)
Judgement of God
(Director)
Cavalcade of Love
(Director)
Le Petit Café
(Director)
Seventh Heaven
(Writer)
Seventh Heaven
(Director)
Lovers and Thieves
(Director)
Maya
(Director)
La Dame aux camélias
(Director)
Whims
(Writer)
Miracle of the Wolves
(Writer)
The Seventh Commandment
(Director)
Maya
(Adaptation)
Fruits of Summer
(Writer)
Culprit
(Director)
Goodbye Darling
(Writer)
Tartarin of Tarascon
(Adaptation)
Wooden Crosses
(Screenplay)
Le Costaud des Épinettes
(Director)
The Mayor's Dilemma
(Director)
Goodbye Darling
(Director)
La Maison vide
(Director)
The Secret of Rosette Lambert
(Director)
Fruits of Summer
(Director)
The Chess Player
(Writer)
Le Petit Café
(Writer)
La Maison vide
(Writer)