Abder Isker (born Abderrahmane Isker; 11 December 1920 – 14 December 2010), was a French-Algerian film director, screenwriter, and television producer. He was the first Algerian director whose work was screened on French television, and also produced a radio drama / mystery series.
In the late 1930s, the family lived in Hussein-Dey, Algeria. While studying, Isker played for (OHD) football club between 1939 and 1943, with his older brother Nafa. It was at the end of his sporting career, in the early 1950s, that he became passionate about cinema.
He is the great-uncle of filmmaker Akim Isker, whose profession he inspired.
He dedicated his first film to Franco-Muslim friendship.
In the 1970s he shot his television serials and dramas on analog video, rather than film. He created several mystery and detective stories in his TV series during this period, including some based on stories by British crime fiction writer Francis Durbridge, such as A Certain Richard Dorian ( Un certain Richard Dorian; 1973; based on A Man Called Harry Brent) and The Passenger ( La Passagère (1974; based on The Passenger). The first television serial based on Durbridge's stories, also translated by Isker along with Yves Jamiaque, was L'écharpe ( The Scarf) in 1966.
Isker also produced in the 1970s.
In the 1990s he ran the writing workshop for TF1 for two series of Drôles d'histoires ( Funny Stories). From October 1988 to February 1993 he directed a team who wrote and produced two series of Histoires d'amour.
Between 1958 and 1960, he directed a total of 38 episodes of the series Les Enquêtes de Sherlock Holmes, adapted for radio by Jean Marcillac and presented by Maurice Renault, on Paris Inter.
Along with other North African creatives, Isker had an impact on the popularity of North African music in France.
Isker died on 14 December 2010.
Career
Radio
Personal life and death
Selected filmography
As director, TV
External links
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