Jérémie Carboni (born 28 December 1980) is a French film producer, director, advisor and entrepreneur. From his paternal grandmother's side, he is the descendant of the aristocratic and upper-class Michau family, from Orléans including senior political and business figures (senior military officers, a deputy mayor of Orléans and industrialists). He is also a cousin of Bruno Rozenker, actor and voice actor and a relative of Pierre-Bloch family. Cousin of the TV producer and politician David Pierre-Bloch, who is the son of Claude Pierre-Bloch (press attaché of Michel Sardou) and the nephew of Jean-Pierre Pierre-Bloch (impresario and deputy mayor of Paris); both brothers are the sons of French minister Jean Pierre-Bloch and were also Johnny Hallyday's friends. Grandson of Michel Carboni (1916-1977), a French senior official, Customs' Director of Nice and on his mother's side of Jacques Rozenker (1932–2014), entrepreneur in the textile field, designer, who has worked with the singer Sylvie Vartan and has launched French stylists Marithé + François Girbaud. Carboni is the son of Jean-Michel Carboni (former diplomat, senior executive of Gaz de France and deputy CEO of Engie) and Régine Rozenker (a classical pianist). The family lived in Norway, France, Greece, Hungary and also in Italy (for 6 years) where he attended the Lycée français Chateaubriand in Rome. Then he studied at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Roma and at the Rome University of Fine Arts before graduating in filmmaking in Paris. He also studied briefly Political science. Carboni began as a production assistant, assistant director and head of development for Stéphane Tchalgadjieff and Danièle Gégauff (Solaris S.A.), producers of film directors Michelangelo Antonioni, Jacques Rivette, Benoît Jacquot, Robert Bresson, Marguerite Duras, Wim Wenders, Wong Kar Wai, Steven Soderbergh, etc. His first film is the documentary Bartleby en coulisses, on the theatrical work of famous writer Daniel Pennac, for the reading-performance of Bartleby, the Scrivener (short story of Herman Melville) at the Théâtre de la Pépinière in Paris (2009).