Movies starring Jean Reno

Famous French actor Jean Reno (Jean Reno) was born on July 30, 1948 in Casablanca, Morocco, North Africa, his parents are French of Spanish descent, when he fled from the Nazi rule of Francisco came to North Africa.

At the age of twelve, Jean Renault returned to France with his parents, but his mother died soon afterward, an event that dealt him a great blow and affected his life in every way, but honed his resolute character. After graduating from high school, he enrolled in the local public theater school, but fate did not work out as he had hoped, and after graduation he had to do something else to make ends meet. During this time he worked at odd jobs, sold musical instruments, worked as a driver, and was once stationed in Germany in the army. It was only on the recommendation of friends that he got a chance to act on television.

Jean Renaud met Luc Besson, then assistant director of the film "Les Bidasses aux Grandes Manoevres", when he performed in the 1980 movie, and from then on he began a close and friendly collaboration with Luc Besson. In the five films directed by Luc Besson, such as Grand bleu, Le (1988), Visitors, Les (1993) and Leon, the two of them built up an excellent trust and tacit understanding. In particular, Luc Besson's "Leon", which was tailor-made for him, made him one of the world's leading stars, and he began his Hollywood movie career.

He co-starred with Meg Ryan in French Kiss (1995), Tom Cruise in Mission: Impossible (1996), and Robert De Niro in Mission: Impossible (1996). Niro (1996) and Robert De Niro (1998), with these Hollywood stars, Jean Reno's value has increased.

Jean Renaud is one of the most talented French actors of his generation, with a solid acting background and a versatile repertoire, not only in action movies, but also as a comedian. In "For the love of Roseanna" (Pour l'amour de Roseanna) (1997), "time and space" and other films, Jean Renault to the audience to show his humor, funny side, people feel that this killer really is not too cold. Although his acting skills are not bad, he seems to have made a name for himself, but until 2000 when he was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award by the European Film Awards, it seems that he has not been related to the international awards. In fact, as early as 1994 and 1995, Jean Reno was nominated for two consecutive French Cesar Awards for Best Actor for his roles in "For the Love of Rosina" and "Leon," but missed out. 2000, he returned from Hollywood to his homeland of France, starring in the acclaimed and well-received "Crimson Rivers, The". The gentle killer's tireless efforts on screen were not in vain, and on December 5, 2000 the European Film Awards presented him with a Lifetime Achievement Award.

Away from the movies, Jean Reno led a dramatic life, living for many years in Paris with a model who gave him two children, but eventually broke up because of their incompatible personalities. 1996, at the age of 50, Jean Reno married an unknown woman named Nathalie yszkiewicz. 1998, Nathalie gave birth to his son, Nathalie. Nathalie gave birth to a daughter for him, now Jean Renault in Paris and Los Angeles, respectively, have purchased a house, and staged and wife and daughter in both places to live, *** enjoy the happiness of the family, completely in the role of a new good man.

Jean Renault was awarded the National Order of Merit by French President Jacques Chirac on December 15, 2003, which is the second most prestigious cultural award after the Medal of Honor. In his award speech, Chirac said, "Jean Reno is a great actor."

His films:

1. "The Da Vinci Code/The Da Vinci Code"

The film tells the story of Robert Langdon, a Harvard semiotician, who receives an emergency phone call at midnight one night during a business trip to Paris, France, and learns that the aging director of the Louvre Museum has been murdered in the Louvre's museum, and that an elusive body has been found next to him. elusive cipher was found next to his body. Langdon and Sophie Neff, a gifted French code-breaking expert, are shocked to discover a series of clues hidden in Leonardo da Vinci's works of art while sorting through a pile of strange ciphers. These clues, clearly visible to everyone, were cleverly hidden by the artist.

2. The Pink Panther

This film is a prequel to the 1964 Pink Panther series The Guns of Darkness, which tells the story of a man who is accidentally shown the super Pink Panther diamonds, an heirloom of his family. "diamond," followed by his accidental death and the disappearance of the diamond. French Detective Inspector Clouseau and his partner Patin go to investigate the case, but as soon as he meets the biggest suspect in the case - the beautiful singer girlfriend of the deceased, Hania - he is immediately mesmerized by her. At the same time, when the murder of a French soccer manager takes place in the city, and the famous "soccer killer" goes on a rampage to kill his team's stars, Crusoe must restrain his lust to uncover the truth about these cases and bring the real criminals to justice.

A coach of international soccer stature is murdered and his sky-high priced ring is stolen by his killer. The ring is valuable because it is set with the precious Pink Panther diamond. The French government needs an able detective to solve the murder and recover the stone. But they can't find the right man for the job, and they finally decide to bring Agent Clouseau (Steve Martin) back into the fold. And so begins a new adventure for Agent Clouseau. Who is the murderer? Is it the famous pop star (Beyoncé Norris)? At this point, of course, the first thing that comes to Detective Clouseau's mind is that his old partner Bowden (Jean Reno) can come to his aid once again. While the golden pair have to uncover the killer's true colors, they have to watch out for their boss, Dreyfus (Kevin Kline), who takes all the credit for himself. In short, it's all as crazy and hilarious as ever, with all common sense of the law thrown out the window. Beware, Pink Fever is about to hit you right in the funny bone again.

3. Empire des loups, L'

Anna (Yayi Jovia) is the wife of a high-ranking government official. Over the past month, she has been experiencing hallucinations and memory loss. Worse still, she has begun to disown her high-ranking official husband, and suspecting that she is schizophrenic, she seeks out a psychiatrist for a diagnosis. Inadvertently, she discovers a book on plastic surgery, and begins to suspect that her husband has had plastic surgery. ...... Or perhaps, she herself has been plasticized? ! </P> <br> At the same time, three consecutive murders take place in Paris, all of them Turkish women working in underground factories, whose bodies are mutilated and who have been subjected to extremely brutal abuse before their deaths! Police officer Paul (Jocelyn Kivihan) feels that there is more to the three cases than meets the eye, and in order to get to the bottom of the Turkish organization behind the murders, he must enlist the help of Kiefer (Jean Renault), who is the most familiar with the Turkish scene. While tracking down the truth behind the scenes, they discover that Anna's identity is an important clue to the murders. ......

4. Hotel Rwanda

On April 6, 1994, a plane carrying Rwandan Hutu President Habyarimana and the President of Burundi was struck by a rocket over the Rwandan capital, Kigali. On April 6, 1994, a plane carrying Rwandan Hutu President Habyarimana and Burundian President Habyarimana was shot down by a rocket over the Rwandan capital, Kigali, killing both heads of state. On April 7, the plane crash immediately triggered suspicion between Hutus and Tutsis in Rwanda, which erupted into an armed conflict of unprecedented proportions and tribal massacres, beginning a human tragedy that has shocked the world ...... Hutus Racist-controlled radio stations also fanned the flames of the massacre, screaming, "Let all the pent-up energy explode out ...... At such a time, blood will roll out", and the out-of-control crowds searched for and killed the Tutsis in the uncontrollable media call. Tutsis, and the smell of blood filled the air.

While the country goes mad and the world closes its eyes, there is a warm embrace from a hotel manager named Paul Rusesabagina (Don Cheadle), who runs the Miller Collins, a local hotel that is home to European tourists and military dignitaries, and who uses all of his connections to take care of the hotel's customers. For Paul, a Hutu whose wife, Tashana (Sophie O'Connell), is Tutsi, protecting his Tutsi relatives and friends in the midst of a tumultuous time becomes the greatest mission and challenge of his life. The inaction of the UN peacekeeping force and the isolation from the world's media made Mr. and Mrs. Paul and the 1,268 local residents who had taken refuge in the hotel even more confident and courageous to live on, "We will make the world feel ashamed to take the action it deserves." Things get worse and worse, with some one million people dying within a hundred days, but the Mille Collines Hotel becomes an oasis of life in a bloodthirsty desert. ......

5. UNDERCURRENT 2: ANGELS OF DOOM / RED HUNT: TRIAL OF END OF DAYS

After the case of the Alps, Pierre Niemanns, the police chief (Jean-Jacques Niemanns), is forced to take the lead. Sergeant Mance (Jean Reno) is promoted to chief of police thanks to his outstanding casework skills. His new partner, Ledda (Beno?t Massimolette), has also matured and is handling cases on his own. A series of murders on the French-German border brings the two men back together.

In a La Baudy monastery in northeastern France, a statue of Jesus hanging on the wall oozes blood, and Niemans, using a scientific instrument, figures out that a body has been stuffed alive inside the wall, and that the enigmatic totem marks appearing next to the body indicate that the dead man was not an ordinary victim. The strange rituals that took place on the dead body also seem to hide unusual meanings ......

On the other hand, Detective Ledda drove his car into a man who looked exactly like Jesus, and the man who called himself "Jesus" fell into a state of shock and semi-consciousness. Ledda thinks he's encountered a religious fantasist, but he soon realizes there's a strong connection between the incident and the case Niemans is working on. In this way, the case that the two detectives are each pursuing turns into a bizarre case with ****ty clues.

Murder after murder continues to occur, with more and more suspicions centering on the abbey. This is because a mysterious monk with supernatural abilities appears at each crime scene and disappears without a trace after taking out the dissidents. Niemans and Ledda's eyes were clouded with confusion until they finally realized that each of the victims had the same name and profession as the Twelve Apostles of Christ.

With the help of policewoman Marie (Camille Natta), an expert in religious history, Niemans and Ledda dig deeper into the mysterious and unbelievable conspiracy to uncover the truth. Why is the powerful Emhursh Wan Kaden so concerned about the monastery and its underground facilities? Who are these angels who spread horrific apocalyptic messages? What does this bizarre murder have to do with biblical prophecy? What kind of disaster will the opening of the Seventh Seal lead to? Pierre Niemans and Red are determined to find out all the answers. But they'll have to risk their lives as they delve into the deepest recesses of a centuries-old crypt to uncover a secret coveted by a seemingly unstoppable force. ......

6. "Shut Up, Tais-toi!

French actor Jean Renault and Gérard Depardieu, another famous French actor, teamed up to make the 2003 box office debut in their native France.

The film tells the story of Ruby, an assassin played by Jean Renault, who goes on a quest for revenge for the murder of his wife by her enemy. During this quest, he meets Quentin (Gérard Depardieu), a kind-hearted and somewhat stupid man, and the two of them engage in a hilarious bit of French comedy.

The film was the top debut of the year at the French box office, and the producers and distributors are looking forward to the eventual box-office success of the movie. The two actors are also looking forward to working together. The movie is a big bomb for the Christmas season.

7. Rollerball

This is a new sci-fi version of the 1975 classic Rollerball. In the future century, a brutal and exciting sport called "speed" is taking over the world. Filled with money, sex, and gambling, the "Speed Sport" league travels the globe, where competitors from all over the world, dressed in outlandish costumes that express their individuality, race around the field on inline skates or dirt bikes to throw the ball to determine the winner.

Jonathan (Chris Klein), a world-renowned speedster, discovers that the league's owner (Jean Reno) has been covertly staging clashes, fights, bloodshed, and even killings during the races in order to boost ratings and gambling money for the global broadcasts. To fight back, Jonathan joins forces with other like-minded teammates to extend the war on the field to off the field in a retaliatory campaign to defend justice.

8. Just Visiting

An eleventh-century French warrior (Jean Renault) and his loyal friends are on a quest to find a way out of the war. A 11th century French warrior (Jean Renault) and his loyal retainer (Christian Clavier) accidentally find themselves in the path of a sorcerer. The two of them are sent into a time tunnel by a sorcerer and travel from the eleventh century to present-day America, where they make a lot of jokes, but luckily they meet the beautiful Maureen (Christine Applegate), who is determined to make the world a better place. Luckily, she meets the beautiful Maureen (Christina Applegate), who is determined to help them return to their hometown...

9. Wasabi

Arbor is a tough cop, who is as cynical as he is vindictive, and sometimes he is impulsive, and often fights without saying a word. In fact, he has a heartbreaking past that he doesn't know about. 19 years ago, when he went to Japan on a secret mission, he met a Japanese girl named Keiko and married her, but she mysteriously disappeared. 20 years ago, Abel thought about her and never forgot about her.

One day, a phone call from Japan informs him of Keiko's death from cancer, leaving Abe as the sole legacy donor. So he left for Tokyo and visited Japan again after 20 years, but he didn't expect to be surprised by the situation: firstly, Momotaro, Abe's confused partner, is still working for the French Intelligence Service in Japan, and it is only natural for Abe to experience Japan with him; secondly, he found out that Keiko didn't die of cancer but was assassinated; and even more outrageously, he actually has a 20-year old daughter. year-old daughter.

The strange girl, Yumi, is moody, trendy, weird, beautiful and a loser, but she actually has a bank account with $20 million in it. Since the yakuza want to swallow Yumi's money, Harper has to do his best to keep her safe. At this time, Momotaro is also involved in right and wrong for no apparent reason, so Abe has to punish the crooks in his own way.

10. Rivières pourpres, Les

Niemans, a seasoned Parisian police detective, is ordered to solve a homicide of a tutor at the University of Gernon in the foothills of the Alps. Niemans discovers that this prestigious institution has a long history of talent, but the university has allowed intergenerational marriages among the faculty in order to promote the idea of elitism. At the same time, a criminal case is taking place in a small town near the university, where someone has invaded the crypt of Judith, a ten-year-old girl who died in a car accident eighteen years ago, and painted swastikas there.

Are these two seemingly isolated cases intrinsically linked? Niemans immediately decides to join forces with local police officer Max. After layers and layers of extraction, so that the hidden behind the case of the truth surfaced, it turns out that this is a horrific terrorist incident. So, they immediately took decisive measures. After a thrilling struggle, the criminal finally took the blame, but the two detectives also paid the price.

11. The Prodigal/Cold-Blooded Tough Guy Ronin

Mysterious woman (Netascha McElhone) is hired to lead a team consisting of ex-CIA officer Sam (Robert De Niro), ex-European Intelligence officer Vincent (Joan Leno), German electronics expert Grogor (Stellan Skarsg?rd), chauffeur Larry (Scip Sandoz) and British weapons expert Spence (Sean Bean) are among the team about to retrieve a mysterious handheld briefcase from the hands of international criminals.

No one ever tells them the name of their employer and their goal and true identity. With a gunshot heard along the Seine, the movie moves into the south of France as the team heads to Cannes on a mission. The intense chase scene that ensues puts every viewer right in the middle of the movie. What follows is an inevitable betrayal and a non-stop thrilling chase.

This movie is worth watching just for Robert De Niro and Jean Reno. The story is about a group of secret service agents who are asked by a mysterious woman to steal a suitcase. The shocking thing is that this is a trap set by the NATO and Warsaw Pact intelligence agencies to get rid of these "dangerous people". It's a thriller with themes of suspicion, mistrust and betrayal, with two frightening car chases.

12. Godzilla

The so-called "Godzilla" is a monster that appeared in Japanese movies, and since it first appeared on the silver screen in 1954, it's been released in a series of 22 films. This time, Hollywood sent a group of producers to Japan to acquire the filming rights from Toho Films to tell a completely different story: the whole of New York City is thrown into chaos when a climate anomaly caused by a nuclear test brings back to life a huge monster that is 90 bodies tall. Scientists, journalists, TV cameramen, military personnel and insurance company inspectors join forces to combat it. The panic and destruction it causes is so great that if it is not stopped, it will reduce everywhere it goes to rubble. Godzilla's look and the visual effects throughout the movie were a lot of work for the producers, as the director didn't want to use an existing model, but rather innovate on the basis of the original features. ......

13. Roseanna's Grave

The film is a romantic comedy that combines warmth and romance, with the hilarious and heartwarming actions of a loving husband who tries to fulfill his wife's last wish, affecting everyone around him. In a small Italian town, Marcello (Jean Renault) is caught in a dilemma. His beloved wife is dying and wants to be buried with her dead son, but there are only three spaces left in the town's cemetery, and the owner is unwilling to expand it. Marcello has to do everything he can to prevent death from coming to the townspeople, so he keeps on doing good deeds; donating blood, directing traffic, keeping children safe, and in general not letting anyone die before his wife! But the gods like to work against him...

14. Un amour de sorcière

In early fall, magic will fill the starry sky! Michael (Jill Bailor), an inventor, meets and falls in love with a beautiful young girl, Morgane (Vanessa Bachardis), while he is traveling to Paris. Afterward, Michael realizes that Morgane is a magical nymph, and their romance is prevented by the Elder of Magic (Jean Renault), who knows about it. After a grueling spell battle, Michael realizes that there is only one thing in the world that can break the curse of the magical elders...

15. Mission: Impossible

A team from the CIA is on a mission in Prague, but when the man they want to catch dies and the classified information they want to protect is lost, only Jim and Eaton are left to lead the team. Afterwards, Eaton learns from the agent leader that the operation was a hoax to find out the traitor inside.

Now it seems that the dead won't be traitors, while all the living are suspect. This is especially true for Eaton, who has suddenly had 120,000 dollars added to his bank account. Eaton was wrongly accused and had a lot to say about it. So he sets up his own team to find out what's going on. The hero is not only able to dangle from a height to steal the file, escape in a huge wave, in the train at nearly 300 kilometers per hour to fight, but also the use of computer networks is also very familiar with. The movie is based on the 1960s and 1970s TV series of the same name.

15. Jaguar, Le

Monk, visiting France from the rainforests of South America, accidentally bumps into a Frenchman named Perrin in an elevator, and he takes to Perrin so well that he lets Monk sleep in his hotel room, despite Perrin's cold and uninterested attitude.

The next day, halfway through the official visit, the monk suffered a heart attack, and after being rushed to the hospital, he was unable to speak, but insisted on seeing Perrin, who was reluctant to go to the hospital.

From the moment these two people meet in the elevator, it seems like everything is destined to happen, and now it's hard to say you hate each other...

16. French Kiss

Kate and her fiancé have always had a good relationship, but her fiancé has moved on since she arrived in France. To find out what happened, she decides to go to France herself. On the plane, she meets Luc, a French man. This man seems to be a bit mysterious, and Kate seems to feel that Luc seems to be taking advantage of her; while Luc listens to Kate's troubles in this utilization, and is eager to help her find her fiancé, so the two people experience a romantic encounter traveling through France... The writer-director puts the story between the cultural differences between the United States and France to unfold, because the script was inspired by the author's experience of studying in France for a year, they use the camera lens to take the audience to see the French landscape, recognize that the culture there is not a one-size-fits-all romance, but a diversity.

17. Al di là delle nuvole

The film begins with Marco Vecchi as a film director whose plane descends from the clouds to find a suitable protagonist for his next film, and like the omniscient angels that most often appear in Wenders' films, he scours the landscape to find and recount the stories of several pairs of lovers who are aching for love. First - "Impossible Love," second - "The Maiden and the Crime," third - "Don't Come to Me," fourth - "Dirty Bodies. >In the slums of New York lives an Italian man named Léon, a professional killer. One day, his neighbor's little girl, Mathilda, knocks on his door and asks to stay with him for a while to avoid the killing. It turned out that the owner of the neighbor's house is the eyes of the police, only because of the embezzlement of a small package of drugs by the evil police to eliminate the whole family piece of punishment. Mathilda is saved by Leon and begins to help Leon with his housekeeping and teaching him to read and write, while Leon teaches the girl how to use a gun, and they get along well.

The girl follows a police officer and goes to take revenge on him, but she is arrested instead. Leon arrives in time to rescue the girl. They move again, but the girl still falls into the hands of the police. Leon takes down a bunch of cops, rescues the girl again and lets her escape through the ventilation ducts, and instructs her to go and take out the money he's saved up. Leon disguises himself as a policeman and tries to blend out of the encirclement, but is recognized by the evil police. At the last moment, Leon detonates a bomb on his body. ......

19. "Visiteurs, Les"

This movie depicts the story of the death of Jean Reno and Cristien Bertrand. The movie depicts the story of Gode, played by Jean Renault and Christiane Clavier. The two men, Knight Godefroy and his squire Lafrepuy, played by Jean Renault and Christian Clavier, are thrown from 1122 AD to the modern day by a sorcerer's mistake. They are amazed by modern amenities such as telephones, automobiles, baths, and so on, which leads to a series of jokes. Director Jean-Marie Poiret has a knack for highlighting and playing with the modern world. Director Jean-Marie Poiret highlights and plays with the actors, focusing on an eclectic mix of witty writing, burlesque and Gallic humor. The film "plays" with a millennium-long "time lag", making good use of the conventions of the past and of the present, and centers on the surprise of a medieval visitor confronted with the ugliness of the modern electronic world. It makes perfect use of the numerous special effects to make it a slapstick thriller comedy.

20. Nikita

Nikita (Anne Parillaud) and a group of friends rob a store of medicines. The owner of the store and her friends are killed in the incident, and Nikita is sent to prison for killing a policeman. At this time comes a mysterious government organization that selects Nikita and trains her to become a secret agent assassin, after several years of secret agent training, Nikita returns to real life as an ordinary nurse, at this time she falls in love with a man, and their relationship is faced with a tense situation when Nikita receives an order from a secret agent...

Breaking Bad, directed by one of France's most valuable and recognizable filmmakers, Lubberson, is a dissecting of the horrors behind the state bureaucracy from the perspective of a secret agent killer, presenting Lubberson's exploration of human nature, which was once remade by Hollywood into the American version of Two-Faced Scorpioness, one of the more commercially viable of Lubberson's works.

1991 César Award (Best Actress), 1992 Golden Globe nomination for Best Foreign Language Film

21. Grand bleu, Le

Jacques (Jean-Marc Barr), a lover of the sea, has always wanted to be with the sea, even though his father was swallowed up by the sea in a diving accident when he was young. Even when his father was swallowed up by the sea in a diving accident when he was a young man, Jacques' love for the sea never changed.

But after a chance encounter with a beautiful young woman named Johanna (Rosanna Arquette), Jaq falls in love with her, and since then, Jaq's life seems to be out of his control, with Jaq at a loss to decide between the sea and Johanna...

The film, which opened the 1988 Cannes Film Festival, is an autobiographical account of a man who finds it difficult to fit into the real world and turns to his dream of a different life. It is an autobiographical film, with a strong sense of autobiography, in which the human being continues to challenge the limits, but ends up returning to the sea, in a blue-tinted movie.

1988 Cannes Film Festival opening blockbuster, 1988 César Award (Best Music and Best Cinematography)

22. I Love You

23. Subway

To prevent the mob boss from taking back the secret, the thief Fred (Christopher Lambert) hides the documents in the French subway. The documents are hidden in the subway in France. As he enters the subway, Fred slowly realizes the diversity and complexity of the place. In the world of the subway, there are everything from thieves to musicians, and everyone is wandering around with nothing better to do. .... While Flieder tries to sell the documents, he unexpectedly falls in love with Helena (Isabelle Adjani), a woman who comes to buy the documents, but unfortunately she is not interested in Flieder. Then the tension finally occurs, and while the killer is on the hunt and the police are in full search of the subway, Fred is caught between a rock and a hard place...

The film has a comic-book style, concise dialogues, and is a commonplace police procedural, but with the colorful primary colors of Baroque (blue and red), the audience can feel what Lubbersson called "joke, game". This is Lubbersson's first time combining a strong cast, such as Isabelle Eugenie, Jean Hugo Angela, Jean Renault and Christophe Lambert, for a great movie to look forward to.

24. Notre histoire

Robert meets Donati on a train, and she tells him the story of a man and a woman who meet on the train, have a romantic one-night stand, and then, in order to stay together longer, go to her mountain hut - drinking beer and forgetting about her Parisian wife! ......

25. "Dernier combat, Le"

In the ruins of a degraded civilization, where food and water are seized for survival, where savagery replaces verbal communication, and where human relations are in a state of confrontation, sex becomes the most powerful driving force. Sex" becomes the most powerful driving element. In this barren land, we will be able to see the way in which many people live and die. ......

This film is the result of Luc Besson's passion, exuberant energy and explosive power when he was unknown in the film industry, breaking through all the traditions and breaking free from all the cages under the commercial mechanism, and risking the absence of color, dialogue and stars. The movie was completed with no color, no dialogue, no stars, etc. When the film was completed, there was no way to publicize it, so Lubertson took the film to the Avocet Film Festival in Switzerland, where it won the Special Jury Prize and the Critics' Award, thus opening up his international popularity. The film dissects the ruins of civilization in the aftermath of a nuclear war, and because it is colorless, it is a black-and-white film.

(PS: I love Reno so much~~~~~~)