
Acting
Clément Brun began his acting career at a very young age, stepping into the world of café-théâtre where he trained in improvisation, among other disciplines. He continued his formal education by enrolling in his city's Conservatory of Dramatic Arts (where he was awarded the Gold Medal)and subsequently at the Théâtre National de Nice. At the age of 20, he turned his focus to stand-up comedy. He wrote, directed, and performed his first one-man show, which led to opportunities to open for major French artists such as Michaël Grégorio, Roland Magdane, and Titoff. Simultaneously, he continued to act in both contemporary and classical theater productions. He landed his first feature film role playing Ludo in Je vous aime très beaucoup, directed by Philippe Locquet. In 2012, he was cast as Rémy, the young assistant to Juliette (Anne Girouard), in No Limit on TF1, the first television series produced by Luc Besson. A year later, his first one-man show was adapted into a short film titled Retenez bien ma gueule !. He played the lead role in the film, acting opposite director Georges Lautner and actors Daniel Russo and Michel Crémadès. Clément Brun has since appeared in numerous television productions, notably including Le Piège Afghan, Section de Recherches, Plus Belle la Vie, Un Père Coupable, Scènes de Ménages, Meurtres au Mont Ventoux, and Meurtres à Grasse. On stage, Clément Brun has demonstrated his versatility in both classical and contemporary repertoires. His theater credits include key roles in Molière's Les Fourberies de Scapin and Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream, as well as a tour with Les Monologues de Feydeau. As a stand-up comedian, he followed his initial success with several other solo shows, including the diptych Retenez bien ma tête, demain je serai chômeur ! and its sequel Retenez bien ma tête, 2main je serai chômeur !, followed by Je t'aime d'Humour. He is currently touring with his latest high-energy one-man show, Explose.

When the mother they have never known dies, three half brothers aged 8, 15 and 17 respectively, who were all brought up in different ways, meet for the very first time. They spend the long summer holidays with Nonna, their grandmother, and start sharing secrets and rabbits, polenta and mean tricks, adventures and first time experiences, together. At last their once solitary lives take a new direction.

"Hape" Wegener is an old hippie and has a lot of debts. At the cemetery he happens to meet the widow Martha Ebinghaus, who clearly comes from wealthy circles. Hape poses as a mysterious diplomat in order to gain the trust of the unstable Martha and then wants to reap financial benefits from it. Martha is fascinated by Hape and his stories and Hape's plan seems to be working.



A doctor on a French military base in Afghanistan, Nadia, in her thirties, works for the coalition of major Western powers. When she is sent on a mission to a village in a strategic location, her convoy falls into an ambush. Nadia and a soldier of Tajik origin are captured by a group of Taliban led by Abdullah, a Pakistani. The soldier is beheaded, while Nadia is miraculously released thanks to the intervention of a Pashtun leader, Hassan Walli, whom she had met ten years earlier in Paris. Using this friendship, Colonel Leroy of the DGSE asks the young woman to get closer to Hassan, who is seen as a moderate opposed to Al-Qaeda…

"Hape" Wegener is an old hippie and has a lot of debts. At the cemetery he happens to meet the widow Martha Ebinghaus, who clearly comes from wealthy circles. Hape poses as a mysterious diplomat in order to gain the trust of the unstable Martha and then wants to reap financial benefits from it. Martha is fascinated by Hape and his stories and Hape's plan seems to be working.

Player follows a righteous, self-controlled and rather boring lawyer, who is sent to Nice on a divorce case. As he arrives, everything starts go wrong – he is cheated out of $2 million company money and the future looks bleak, when he meets his old buddy, a gambler of easy virtue.

