
Pierre Beccu
Directing
Biography
Pierre Beccu is a French film director, born on September 27, 1963, in Chambéry. After earning a Baccalaureate in Science (Bac D) in Chambéry, he arrived in Paris in 1981 to study film at Paris 3 University – Sorbonne Nouvelle. In 1983, he continued his studies in Italy, where he joined the "BASSANO Group – Ipotesi Cinema," founded and directed by Ermanno Olmi, the director of The Tree of Wooden Clogs. From 1984, he directed documentaries for television before moving into feature films in 1992 with The Last Season, followed by A Trip Among Friends. Since then, Pierre Beccu has primarily focused on documentaries for television and film. Since 1997, alongside his work as a writer-director, Pierre Beccu has been leading film projects with younger generations, fostering a new artistic and civic engagement. In the method now championed by the association "6labs - les enfants médiateurs" (6labs - Children as Mediators), everything begins with a strong perception of nature and the surrounding environment, leading to storytelling through cinematic language and digital tools. Empowered by their creative potential, children and young people become authors and actors in shaping the present world and the future they are building, and consequently, influential figures and mediators for the adults around them.
Known For

Years ago, Jean Marsan had aspirations to be a scholar. He also had a very serious romance going on. His thick-headed, uncomprehending family soon put an end to both of those unacceptable behaviors, and he spent the rest of his youth tending cows on the family farm. Now he is old, his idiot family members have died, and he's about to sell the farm (now his) to a developer. However, there are still cows to take care of until the sale goes through, and he's not as agile as he used to be. When a young local fellow offers to help him with his farm chores, he grudgingly accepts and their initially antagonistic relationship deepens over the summer. The director of this film grew up in the French Alps on a farm similar to this one and has taken care that the details of farm management are accurately and precisely depicted. Of particular interest to cheese connoisseurs is the footage of the two men making a delicious but probably unhygienic local cheese.
The Last Season

Across France, Spain, Madagascar and Burkina Faso, 332 children and adolescents seize the camera to share their expectations with us and build a new future. Between climate issues and social justice, they challenge us on today's emergencies. Accompanied by the director Pierre Beccu, but also by Roukiata Ouedraogo, Pierre Rabhi, and the music of Matthieu Chedid, they tell and put into practice what they want to change for our future.
Graines d'espoir

In 1985, André Payraud, a pioneer of whitewater swimming, descended the sacred Ganges River from its source at an altitude of 4200 meters, amidst the ice of Gangotri and astonished pilgrims: the baptism of the 3rd eye.
Le Nageur du Gange

Two Quebec acrobats embark on an unusual journey through France. Childhood friends, André Fontaine and Michel Leroy find themselves in the Alps. André had been walking around France for three years with a baby bather who spit fire and gave him a line in the street. As for Michel, he was moping around in a Montreal bar. Without admitting it, they needed each other. The duo quickly reunited and traveled to Paris in a Citroën Acadiane, equipped like a house, where fame awaited them. Michel discovers the "Old Country" and his thirst for recognition is coupled with a quest for identity, that of his Breton origins.
Un voyage entre amis

Meeting in Chamonix with Éric Escoffier, famous mountaineer of the 80s, victim of a car accident in September 1987. Victim of multiple fractures and total paralysis on his left side, Escoffier managed to walk again, despite the doctors' pessimistic prognoses... The commentary on images of Éric Escoffier in his daily life in Chamonix and archive images and photographs alternates with archive documents, extracts from the films "Profession grimpeur" by Philippe Lallet and "Face nord" by Jean Afanassieff as well as interviews with the protagonist, Rémi Éric Escoffier and Michel Garcia. Great among the greatest, Éric Escoffier, who disappeared in the mountains at Broad Peak on July 29, 1998, will never have been an ordinary man.
Éric Escoffier - Portrait of a Man Who Became Ordinary

No description available.
Jouer et grandir

André Payraud, born in 1948 in Passy, Haute-Savoie, nicknamed "the swimmer of the impossible," is a major figure in French whitewater swimming, known by the nickname "Dédé the Carpet." He is renowned for his daring descents of large mountain rivers and for having helped popularize the sport from the 1980s onward. His achievements include swimming down the Mont Blanc torrent in 1980, the first in a long series of filmed feats: swimming Everest in 1982; the Ganges in 1985; the Colorado; Annapurna; the Jordan River—no river can stop Dédé in his quest for adventure. For his whitewater exploits, André Payraud was made a Knight of the National Order of Merit and received the Silver Medal for Youth and Sports. Alongside his exploits around the world, Dédé set up the first rafting company in Haute-Savoie in 1982, in Domancy, Session Raft, Aventures Payraud mont-Blanc..
André Payraud, le nageur de l'impossible

No description available.