1973
This 4-part film covers Christmas Eve at the St. Baume grotto in Provence (dir: Claude Dupont); the accidental discovery and partial destruction of archaeological relics during land development in Susa, Iran (dir: Jean Perrot); the Concorde project (dir: Bernard Queysanne); and the use of glass in contemporary architecture (dir: Jacques Dupont).
1973
This 4-part film covers a visit to the Mont St. Michel monastery in Normandy, North Western France (dir: Max Gérard); an archetypal library concept for kids in Clamart (dir: Claire Denis); an ancient tapestries exhibit in Lyon (dir: Carlos Vilardebó); and the game of pétanque, a form of lawn bowling (dir: Jean-Daniel Simon).
1973
This 3-part film covers the Marseille women's choir "La Maitrise Gabriel Fauré" (dir : Max Gérard); a retrospective on 50 years of surrealism at "Musée des Beaux-Arts de Lyon" (dir : Jacques Scandelari); and the Jean-Louis Barrault company's production of a Paul Claudel play, The Satin Slipper, at Théâtre d'Orsay (dir : Carlos Vilardebó).
1973
This 4-part film covers the comedienne Emanuelle Riva (dir: Georges Franju); painter Gérard Titus-Carmel (dir: Jacques Scandelari); the "Institut Français de Recherche Agronomique" and agricultural expansion in the Côte d'Ivoire (dir: Carlos Vilardebó); and singer Julien Clerc (dir : Patrice Molinard).
1973
This 4-part film covers the emergence of the School of Fontainebleau, a sixteenth century artistic movement (dir: Yves Allain); the French "snow class", or how elementary school students live and learn in the Alps for one month (dir: Max Gérard); singer and poet Charles Trenet (dir: Luc Bérimont); and biology professor Jean-Marie Pelt on the links between man and certain plants (dir: Max Gérard).
1973
This 4-part film covers a Fourteenth of July in Paris (dir: Jacques Scandelari); the graphic artist and painter Jules Chéret (dir: Carlos Vilardebó); the covered walkways and arcades of Paris (dir: Jacques Scandelari); and the new suburban city food market "Marché d'Intérêt National de Rungis" (dir: Max Gérard).
1973
This 3-part film covers the International Accommodation and Congress Center, or FIAP, in Paris (dir: Bernard Queysanne, with Georges Perec, writer); the legacy of Nicéphore Niépce, the French inventor of photography (dir: Yves Allain); and the 1973 Cannes Film Festival and its stars (dir: Jacques Scandelari).