Nicolas Vanier

Nicolas Vanier

Known For:Directing
Gender:Male
Birthday:1962-05-05
Place of Birth:Dakar, Senegal
Also Known As:
Known For: Directing Gender: Male Birthday: 1962-05-05 More

Biography

Nicolas Vanier (born 5 May 1962) is a French adventurist, writer and director. His 2004 film The Last Trapper follows a trapper in Yukon, Canada. His film, Loup ("Wolf") was released at the end of 2009 and was presented at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival. Loup is about the life of the Evens tribe in North Eastern arctic Siberia, in the Verkhoïansk mountain range, who live by raising large herds of reindeer (caribou), which involves protecting them from attacks by wolves. In 2018, France Nature Environnement formally complained that a film crew overseen by Vanier had disturbed a colony of Greater Flamingoes, by repeatedly flying over them in an ultra-light aircraft, causing many - an estimated 11% of the total breeding population in France - to desert their nests and eggs. Source: Article "Nicolas Vanier" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
More »

Acting

More
Coureurs des bois
Documentary Adventure
Yukon Quest
Documentary Adventure
L'odyssée blanche
Adventure Documentary
Un hiver de chiens
Documentary Adventure
Au Nord De L'Hiver
Adventure Documentary
Partage des eaux
Documentary Adventure
Rivières ouvertes
Documentary Adventure
  • name:Nicolas Vanier
  • Known For:Directing
  • Gender:Male
  • Birthday:1962-05-05
  • Place of Birth:Dakar, Senegal
  • Also Known As:
  • Biography:Nicolas Vanier (born 5 May 1962) is a French adventurist, writer and director. His 2004 film The Last Trapper follows a trapper in Yukon, Canada. His film, Loup ("Wolf") was released at the end of 2009 and was presented at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival. Loup is about the life of the Evens tribe in North Eastern arctic Siberia, in the Verkhoïansk mountain range, who live by raising large herds of reindeer (caribou), which involves protecting them from attacks by wolves. In 2018, France Nature Environnement formally complained that a film crew overseen by Vanier had disturbed a colony of Greater Flamingoes, by repeatedly flying over them in an ultra-light aircraft, causing many - an estimated 11% of the total breeding population in France - to desert their nests and eggs. Source: Article "Nicolas Vanier" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Search history
delete
Popular search