Christophe Gans
Christophe Gans was born on Mar 11, 1960 in France. Christophe Gans's big-screen debut came with Necronomicon: Book of Dead directed by Christophe Gans in 1993.
Born in 1960 in Antibes (in the South of France), Christophe Gans became crazy about movies at an early stage. As a teenager, he made a lot of samurai and kung fu super-8 films with his friends. At the end of the seventies, he founded the fanzine "Rhesus Zero" about B-movies. In 1980, he studied at the French cinema school Idhec and directed a short movie called "Silver Slime", a tribute to Mario Bava. In 1982, he founded the magazine "Starfix" and defended directors like David Cronenberg, Dario Argento, Russel Mulcahy, David Lynch, John Carpenter or Sergio Leone. He decided to make movies and directed one of the three parts of _Necronomicon (1994)_ called "The Drowned", then "Crying Freeman" from the famous Japanese manga. Gans created the video collection "HK" devoted to Hong Kong movies. He worked for two years on a free adaptation of Jules Verne's "20,000 Leagues under the Sea" but the project failed. In 1999, he was asked to make Le pacte des loups (2001) ("Brotherhood of the Wolf") about the Beast of Gévaudan, an unknown animal who killed more than one hundred people in France at the end of 18th century. The movie was released in January 2001 and was a great success (more than five million people saw it).
Birthday
Mar 11, 1960Place of Birth
Antibes, Alpes-Maritimes, FranceAlso known
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Awards
2 wins & 6 nominations
Movies & TV Shows
- 2014
writer, director
6.4 - 2006
director
6.5 - 2004
producer
5.0 - 2001
writer, director
7.0 - 1995
writer, director
6.4 - 1993
writer, director
5.8