Coralie Fargeat is one of the fastest-rising French filmmakers, known for films saturated in extreme emotions (often, vengeance) and violence which are influenced by Korean genre cinema. Fargeat made an independent short film in her twenties as director/writer,
Le télégramme (2003), which won prizes at major festivals including the Amiens and Fajr Film Festivals, and then Fargeat created a TV comedy miniseries titled
Les Fées cloches (2007).
Fargeat returned to making short films after studying at the prestigious Paris-based film/TV school, La Fémis, with the sci-fi film,
Reality+ (2014), which won the European Sogni Award at the Antonio Ricci Short Film Festival and screened at the Tribeca Film Festival. Fargeat made her feature debut as director/writer of the bloody feminist thriller,
Revenge (2017), starring Matilda Lutz and premiering at the Toronto Film Festival, won best film at the world’s top genre film festival (Sitges in Spain) and was released in the U.S. by
Neon.
Coralie Fargeat was for the first time director/writer/producer/editor of an English-language feature with the body-horror film
The Substance (2024), starring
Demi Moore,
Margaret Qualley, and
Dennis Quaid, co-produced with Working Title Films and released by Mubi, and which premiered in competition at the Cannes Film Festival where it won the best screenplay Palme prize.