Sébastien Marnier | |
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Born |
Les Lilas,
Île-de-France, France | 22 September 1977
Occupation(s) | film director, screenwriter |
Years active | 2000s-present |
Notable work | The Origin of Evil |
Sébastien Marnier (born September 22, 1977) is a French film director and screenwriter, best known for his 2022 film The Origin of Evil (L'Origine du mal). [1]
A graduate of Paris 8 University Vincennes-Saint-Denis, he was a contributor to Michel Reilhac's 2002 film The Good Old Naughty Days (Polissons et Galipettes), [2] and co-directed two short films, The Main Game (Le Grand Avoir) and Handsome Jack (Le Beau Jacques), with Élise Griffon. As a novice emerging director, however, he had difficulty securing funding to make a feature film, and he turned to other jobs for a number of years.
In 2011 he published the novel Mimi. [3] In 2013, the novel won the Prix du roman gai for the best LGBT-themed novel published in France and Belgium in the previous five years. [4] He subsequently collaborated with Caroline Lunoir, Fanny Saintenoy and Anne-Sophie Stefanini on the collective novel Qu4tre, and published the novella Une vie de petits-fours [5] and the graphic novel Salaire net et monde de brutes, which was inspired by his own employment history of short-term and temporary work. [6]
Faultless (Irréprochable), his feature directorial debut, was released in 2016. [7] He followed up with School's Out (L'Heure de la sortie) in 2018, [8] and The Origin of Evil in 2022. [9]
The Origin of Evil was the winner of the Audience Award for Narrative Features at the 2023 Frameline Film Festival. [10]