Dominique Pinon talks to the camera describing his likes and dislikes, ranging from the simple such as “I hate men with a beard but no moustache” to the more touching, “I like to think that after death can’t be worse than before birth.” Each of his examples is accompanied by a visual demonstration. Jean-Pierre Jeunet reused this technique in his 2001 film Amélie when introducing the characters. —Wikipedia
Several years before he helmed the fourth Alien film, Jean-Pierre Jeunet, together with fellow French cinema wunderkind/creative partner Marc Caro, made his mark on international cinema with two of the most distinctive films of the 1990s. Collaborating throughout the 1980s on ads, music videos, and such shorts as Le Manège (1980), Jeunet and Caro honed their signature visual flair and darkly comic sensibility; Jeunet’s solo effort Foutaises (1989) won a César for Best Short Film. Bringing their unique style to feature films in the 1990s, Jeunet and Caro’s debut work Delicatessen (1991) became an international art film sensation. Hailed for its grotesquely comic and oddly touching tale of post-nuclear survival amid a group of eccentrics in an ominous, almost palpably clammy yet cartoon-like “retro future” setting, Delicatessen attracted an ardent following and earned several festival prizes and two Césars. Flush from Delicatessen’s success, Jeunet and Caro finally made a feature they’d… read more
What I like... Well, I don´t know...Oh, yes! One thing I like...to open a book a few months after the holidays, and find sand between the pages...