Jean-Louis Roy (director)


Jean-Louis Roy was a Swiss film and television director.

Biography

From an early age, Roy frequented the cinemas of Plainpalais in Geneva. At the age of 12, he arranged film screenings with other children in his neighborhood. At the age of 16, Roy was hired by René Schenker to work at Télévision Genevoise, which would become Télévision Suisse Romande, as a sound producer. Due to the uncertainty for the future of television, Roy simultaneously began a photography apprenticeship.
At TSR, he became cameraman, then a film editor, notably working for Claude Goretta. Goretta taught Roy cinematographic writing, allowing Roy to move to directing in 1963. The following year, he won the Rose d'Or with Happy End, and Roy prided himself in showing that Switzerland's cinematography could compete with that of other nations. This would drive him to shoot a spy film, The Unknown Man of Shandigor in 1967, although the film was seen as not Swiss enough. However, it would still represent Switzerland at the Cannes Film Festival and the Locarno Festival. Roy would then take a break from films to focus on television, but returned to the screen following the success of Michel Soutter's The Moon with Teeth.
Roy benefited from collaboration with his father, Alphonse, in soundtracks for his films. Alphonse Roy was a flutist with the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande, and composed the music for D'un jour à l'autre and The Unknown Man of Shandigor.
Roy collaborated with Groupe 5 to film Black Out in 1970. Groupe 5 sought to increase the prominence of French-speaking Swiss films.
Starting in 1972, Roy focused primarily on making creative documentaries, such as L'Indien des Acacias, La Maison des souvenirs, and Romands d'amour. His subjects were considered to be outside of the social norms of the time, such as trans identity, exorcism, etc. In 2001, he presented Portraits passion, a program that broadcast 20 of his best documentaries. Roy retired in 2006.

Filmography