Léo Joannon (21 August 1904 – 28 March 1969) was a French writer and film director. Born in Aix-en-Provence, Joannon was originally a law student who became a novelist and journalist before entering the film industry in the 1920s as a cameraman.
Joannon first attracted international attention in early 1939 during the production of S.O.S. Mediterranean, when his attempts to include shots of a German naval ship docked in the port of Tangier created a diplomatic incident between the pre-World War II French and German governments. The film later won the Grand Prix du Cinema Français.
Joannon is best known to international audiences as the director of the comedy film Atoll K (1951), which was the final motion picture starring the legendary comedic double act Laurel and Hardy. Among his other better-known films were Le Defroqué (1954) and Fort du Fou (Outpost in Indochina) (1962).
Joannon died in Neuilly-sur-Seine.
Source: Article "Léo Joannon" from Wikipedia in english, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.
Directing
69
Male
1904-08-21
Aix-en-Provence, Bouches-du-Rhône, France
Joannon, Raoul Lagneau, Lagneau, Rémy Satz
Farewell, friends
A Girl in a Pocket
The Woman and the Puppet
Iceland Fisherman
Sister Angele's Secret
Assassin in the Phonebook
L'Homme aux clés d'or
The Desert of Pigalle
The Aristocrats
De man zonder hart
Robinson Crusoeland
The Rebels of Lomanach
Les Arnaud
Three Disordered Children
Drôle de noce
Children of Chaos
The Unfrocked One
Les Conquêtes de César
What a Funny Kid!
Lucrèce
Lovers of Paris
Whims
Quand minuit sonnera
So Much Love Lost
We Found a Naked Woman
Outpost in Indo-china
Confessions of a Newlywed
Le Chanteur de minuit
S.O.S. Mediterranean
L'Homme sans cœur
The Emigrant
Train de plaisir
Bibi-la-Purée
600,000 francs per month
Suzanne
Durand versus Durand
On the voice of happiness
He has lost a bride
Secret Documents
The White Truck
Le 84 prend des vacances
Mais n'te promène donc pas toute nue
Klokslag twaalf