
Michel Creton
Acting
14
Movies
10
TV Shows
24
Credits
About
Michel Creton (17 August 1942 in Wassy, Haute-Marne, France) is a French actor. He came to international attention with the release of Un homme de trop (Shock Troops) by Costa Gavras in 1967. Since then, he played in many films, appeared on TV and on stage (for example in 1989 in Un fil à la patte de Georges Feydeau in Théâtre du Palais-Royal in Paris). While he was in cinema a supporting actor, as one of Bernard Fresson's friends in Max an the junkmen, and mostly rare in major roles like his thief in Nicholas Gessner's Le tuer triste, he was a leading man on TV: alongside to Claude Jade in Fou comme François. For his second TV movie with Claude Jade, Treize, he was the writer of the screenplay. Source: Article "Michel Creton" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.

Michel Creton
Acting
Michel Creton (17 August 1942 in Wassy, Haute-Marne, France) is a French actor. He came to international attention with the release of Un homme de trop (Shock Troops) by Costa Gavras in 1967. Since then, he played in many films, appeared on TV and on stage (for example in 1989 in Un fil à la patte de Georges Feydeau in Théâtre du Palais-Royal in Paris). While he was in cinema a supporting actor, as one of Bernard Fresson's friends in Max an the junkmen, and mostly rare in major roles like his thief in Nicholas Gessner's Le tuer triste, he was a leading man on TV: alongside to Claude Jade in Fou comme François. For his second TV movie with Claude Jade, Treize, he was the writer of the screenplay. Source: Article "Michel Creton" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.

Midi Première

At Theatre Tonight

At Theatre Tonight

Police Commissioner Moulin

Police Commissioner Moulin

Graf Luckner

Un mystère par jour

French Fried Vacation

Night Squad

The Milky Way

Door on the Left as You Leave the Elevator

Ménage

Les Beaux Messieurs de Bois-Doré

The Vultures

Armageddon

Max and the Junkmen

La Dame de Monsoreau

Shock Troops

The Loner

Would-Be Gentleman

Monsieur Papa

There Were Days... and Moons

Le Grand Carnaval

At the Meeting with Joyous Death