Yann Samuell is a Director and Scriptwriter French born on 7 june 1965
Yann Samuell
Yann Samuell participated to
8 films (as actor, director or script writer).
Among those,
3 have good markets following the box office.
Here are the best films classified by number of entries :
Director
, 1h49
Directed by Yann SamuellOrigin FranceGenres Drama,
Comedy,
AdventureThemes Films about childrenActors Éric Elmosnino,
Mathilde Seigner,
Alain Chabat,
Fred Testot,
Théo Bertrand,
Tom RivoireRating63%
En 1960, deux bandes de garçons de différents villages, les Longevernes, menés par le chef Lebrac, et les Velrans, menés par le chef Aztec, se livrent une guerre dont le butin est constitué par les boutons des adversaires., 1h33
Directed by Yann SamuellOrigin FranceGenres Drama,
Comedy,
Romantic comedy,
RomanceThemes Films about children,
JeuActors Guillaume Canet,
Marion Cotillard,
Thibault Verhaeghe,
Gérard Watkins,
Gilles Lellouche,
Joséphine Lebas-JolyRating74%
The film begins in Liège in Belgium, where a little girl, Sophie, is being bullied by other children. Only a bus driver and a boy, Julien, help her collect her books that the others have thrown into a puddle., 1h37
Directed by Yann SamuellOrigin FranceGenres Comedy,
RomanceActors Sophie Marceau,
Marton Csokas,
Jonathan Zaccaï,
Michel Duchaussoy,
Thierry Hancisse,
Juliette ChappeyRating56%
Margaret is a beautiful and successful businesswoman selling power plants to the Chinese. With an adoring English lover, she appears to have everything going for her. On her fortieth birthday, Margaret receives the first bundle of letters she wrote to herself when she was seven years old. A jumble of colorful collages, photographs, and wildly creative puzzles seem to have come from a different girl entirely. In a letter the seven-year-old Margaret writes, "Dear me. Today I am seven years old and I'm writing you this letter to help you remember the promises I made when I was 7, and also to remind you of what I want to become..." As her letters to herself keep arriving, Margaret finds herself becoming disenchanted. The letters evoke long-forgotten memories and cast doubt on many of the choices she made in her life. In many ways she's become the opposite of what she hoped to become as a child. Margaret visits her childhood village and, by reconnecting with people who see in her the girl they once knew, she starts finding her way to the woman she vowed to become.