

A French photographer picked up a camera and accidentally started a revolution. Oops.
Pierre Clément, student and photographer of René Vauthier, first accompanied him to Tunisia to make a film on the country's independence in 1957. Destiny led him to Algeria and his presence in February 1958 at the Tunisian-Algerian border changed his life. . Forever. He took his camera and photographed the attacks on Sakia Sidi Youssef before committing himself body and soul to the Algerian cause. Shortly after, he directed the film “Algerian Refugees” before being arrested, tortured and imprisoned, while his third film, “The National Liberation Army in Almaki”, was not finished. Abdel Nour Zahzah, a director who commemorates Pierre Clément, the director who risked his life, the brother of the Algerian resistance, who disappeared in 2007.
Cinematography
Clément's own photographs: history caught in real-time, not reconstructed.
Direction
Zahzah's patient excavation of a nearly forgotten comrade.
Editing
Collage of archive and testimony that refuses easy catharsis.

Director
Abdenour Zahzah
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
René Vauthier, Clément's original mentor, pioneered 'militant cinema' in France—Clément simply took the lesson to its literal frontline conclusion.
Sakia Sidi Youssef, where Clément photographed French attacks, was a pivotal 1958 incident that exposed colonial violence to international press—his images helped shape global perception of the war.