French cinema has a long, prestigious tradition of blurring the line between fact and fiction. The film semi-autobiographique (semi-autobiographical film) is not just a genre in France—it is a cultural institution. From the New Wave to contemporary streaming hits, French directors have consistently used their own lives as raw material, transforming personal pain, childhood memories, and romantic entanglements into universal art. 1. Defining the Genre A semi-autobiographical film differs from a documentary or a pure biopic. It uses real events from the director’s (or writer’s) life but alters details—names, chronologies, composite characters, or outcomes—for dramatic effect. In France, this approach is often linked to the "cinéma d'auteur" tradition, where the director’s personal vision is paramount.
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