Vincent Macaigne (born 19 October 1978) is a French actor, theatre director and film director. He is also a screenwriter and playwright. Macaigne was raised in Paris, the son of a French businessman and an Iranian-born painter. He has an elder brother, who is a forensic doctor. He attended the CNSAD between 1999 and 2002, and staged his first play in 2004. Throughout the 2000s, he acted in several theatre productions and also wrote and staged a number of plays. He suffered two strokes at just thirty years old, one of which occurred after his 2009 staging of the theatrical adaptation of Fyodor Dostoyevsky's The Idiot. In an interview, he said the stroke has had no lasting consequences to his health. His short film What We'll Leave Behind (Ce qu'il restera de nous) won the Grand Prix at the Clermont-Ferrand International Short Film Festival, and was nominated for the César Award for Best Short Film. In 2014, he received nominations for the César Award for Most Promising Actor and the Lumières Award for Most Promising Actor for his role in La Fille du 14 juillet. His directorial feature film debut, Dom Juan, is an adaptation of the play of the same name by Molière. It was screened in the Cineasts of the Present section at the 2015 Locarno International Film Festival. Source: Article "Vincent Macaigne" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Pour se frayer un chemin dans la jungle, il est bon de frapper avec un bâton pour écarter les dangers invisibles
Dilemna Dilemma
(Fox)
En même temps
(Pascal Molitor)
Suspended Time
(Étienne)
A Burning Hot Summer
(Achille)
Day
(Client mécontent)
Best Secret Place
iNTELLIGENCE
(Pascal Rivière)
Celui qui soigne - Muganga
(Guy-Bernard Cadière)
Big Kids
(Yannick)
Le monde à l'envers
(Thierry)
The Rendez-Vous of Déjà-Vu
(Pator)
I'm Your Man
(Bruno)
A World Without Women
(Sylvain)
Stranded
(Sylvain)
2 Autumns 3 Winters
(Arman)
Age of Panic
(Vincent)
Tonnerre
(Maxime)
Paint it Gold
(Arthur Forestier)
The Lizards
(Léon)
Three Friends
(Victor Harzouian)
The Rule of Three
(Vincent)
Sand
Close To The Sultan
Eden
(Arnaud)
Fool Circle
(Bruno)
Truffaut au présent
Bonnard, Pierre and Marthe
(Pierre Bonnard)
Stubborn
(Vincent)
Pourvu qu'il soit doux
La venue de l'Avenir
L’Affaire de l’esclave Furcy
(Lory)
Kingston Avenue
(Vincent)
Two Friends
(Clément)
On War
The Innocents
(Samuel)
News from Planet Mars
(Jérôme)
Struggle for Life
(Marc Châtaigne)
Arco
La Poupée
(Rémi)
Sunday Lunch
(Jean)
Zikaden
(Philipp)
Maria
(Dr. Fointainebleau)
Reinventing Marvin
(Abel Pinto)
Des Plans Sur La Comète
(Franck)
Non-Fiction
(Léonard)
C'est la vie!
(Julien)
Dog
(Jacques Blanchot)
White as Snow
(Vincent)
Happy Birthday
(Romain)
Maybe Tomorrow
Les Indolents
Pour pas être seul
Dear Mother
(Michel)
Love Affair(s)
(François)
How to Make Out
(Poupinel)
The Night Doctor
(Mickaël Kourtchine)
Moonlight Lover
(Vincent)
Arman hors saison
(Arman)
We're Not Animals
Anna Vernor II
(Raphaël Vernor)
Man's Gentle Love
(The waiter)
Love Song for Tough Guys
(Eric Lamb)
Replay
(Henri)
Diary of a Fleeting Affair
(Simon)
A Day in a Life
(Gabrielle's Father)
C’est quoi l’amour ?
We're Live
(Self - Guest)
Irma Vep
(René Vidal)
Le Flambeau, les aventuriers de Chupacabra
(Magic Ludo)
La Flamme
(Ludo)
Faut Voir - L'hebdo cinéma
(Self - Guest)
Stubborn
(Screenplay)
Kingston Avenue
(Writer)
Dom Juan & Sganarelle
(Director)
Dom Juan & Sganarelle
(Writer)
Comfort and Consolation in France
(Director)
Comfort and Consolation in France
(Screenplay)
What We'll Leave Behind
(Director)
What We'll Leave Behind
(Writer)
What We'll Leave Behind
(Editor)
What We'll Leave Behind
(Cinematography)