2003 - Previous edition

2003

Jury

Gallery

14

to

17

April

2003

Edito

Awards

Aigle d’Or de l’Aventure – Grand Prize of the festival
“Les tribus cachées d’Amazonie”
2002 – 52 ‘ – France
Director: Erling Sôderstöm
Production: Striana Productions, France 5

Special Jury Prize – Originality of the scenario
“Richard et ses requins”
2002 – 52′ – France
Director: Roland Théron
Production: Média Vidéo Compagnie

Public Grand Prize Spectators’ favorite
“Richard et ses requins”
2002 – 52′ – France
Director: Roland Théron
Production: Média Vidéo Compagnie

Alain Estève Prize – Technical qualities of the movie
“Troisième Pôle”
2002 – 52′ – France
Director: Michel Peissel
Production: MC 4

CMC Hope Prize – Encouragement prize for filmmaking
“Les tribus cachées d’Amazonie”
2002 – 52 ‘ – France
Director: Erling Sôderstöm
Production: Striana Productions, France 5

Ceremony' master

Didier Regnier

Didier Regnier is a French television host.

1978: winner of The Race Around the World.
1984: host and editor-in-chief of Le Grand raid.
1985: senior reporter for the human rights magazine Résistances.
1988: host of Sagarmatha 88, first direct connection from Everest.

He was host of “Samedi passion” with Gérard Holtz, “Aventures voyages”, “Samedi adventure”, editor-in-chief of “C’est au programme” and official presenter of the Aventure et Découverte festival.

He published “L’aventure du grand Raid” with Robert Laffont in 1986.

Jury's president

Bernard Giraudeau

Bernard Giraudeau was born in La Rochelle in 1947. Actor, director, producer, screenwriter and writer, Bernard Giraudeau was destined for a completely different career, that of a mechanic. At 16, young Bernard entered the School for Apprentice Fleet Mechanics (French Navy). He came out first a year later.

From 1964 to 1966, he joined the navy, before leaving to try his luck as an actor. In 1970, he joined the Conservatory and won the first prize for classical and modern comedy.

In the early 1980s, this blue-eyed seducer starred in popular comedies like The Year of the Jellyfish (1984).

This followed around fifty roles for cinema, television and theater, in which the actor enjoyed more or less success…

Nicolas Peyrac

Nicolas Peyrac

Real name Jean-Jacques Tazartez, Nicolas Peyrac was born on October 6, 1949 in Rennes. With his brothers, he was raised in Brittany by a family of doctors. When his parents divorced in the early 1960s, Nicolas flew to New York with his mother. He lived there for about a year before returning to live with his father in Brittany.

Already very fond of song, he began very early to listen to the great classics of heritage, from Ferré to Brel. He taught himself the guitar and wrote a few texts and poems like any slightly tormented teenager. In addition, he discovered Anglo-Saxon music which enriched his inspiration and his musical culture.

Loïc Leferme

Loïc Leferme

Originally from Malo-les Bains near Dunkirk, Loïc was born on August 28, 1970. He comes from a swimming family: his grandfather, national coach and his father, several times French swimming champion and Olympic pre-selected. (Mexico games).

Loïc discovered freediving during his sports studies at the University of Nice with Olivier Heuleu, a student in his class (member of the French freediving team from 1998 to 2001 – winner of the Team World Cup in 2000 .)

At the end of his studies, he obtained a STAPS master’s degree in which the subject was “Climbing flight”. Indeed, risk in sport is a theme already present in his research. With Olivier, they will read and re-read “Passion of Risk” by David Le Breton (French sociologist, specialist in the representations and involvement of the human body, which he studied in particular by analyzing risky behavior).

Quite gifted, Loïc mainly practices rock climbing and skiing since his adolescence, but also mountaineering and caving.

He was very impressed at the time by great mountaineers like Reinhold Messner (he read “The Mountain with Bare Hands” by René Desmaison), climbers like Patrick Edlinger and Patrick Berhault (with whom he was very close in the last years before his death). ), or even extraordinary, passionate and non-conformist sailors like Bernard Moitessier…
These few destinies will remain the essential references throughout his life in his research and in the explanation of his own sporting and human trajectory…

Didier Regnier

Didier Regnier

Didier Regnier is a French television host.

1978: winner of The Race Around the World.
1984: host and editor-in-chief of Le Grand raid.
1985: senior reporter for the human rights magazine Résistances.
1988: host of Sagarmatha 88, first direct connection from Everest.

He was host of “Samedi passion” with Gérard Holtz, “Aventures voyages”, “Samedi adventure”, editor-in-chief of “C’est au programme” and official presenter of the Aventure et Découverte festival.

He published “L’aventure du grand Raid” with Robert Laffont in 1986.

Photo reportage