André Cayatte (born Feb. 3, 1909, Carcassonne, France—died Feb. 6, 1989, Paris) was a motion-picture director best known for films on crime and justice.
Cayatte abandoned a law practice to become a writer and in 1938 entered the motion-picture industry by selling a film script. Four years later he directed La Fausse Maîtresse (1942; “The False Mistress”). In a series of films in the early 1950s dealing with various aspects of the French judicial system, Cayatte denounced what he viewed as wrong. The pictures—including Justice est faite (1950; Justice Is Done), Nous sommes tous des assasins (1952; We Are All Murderers), Avant le déluge (1954; “Before the Flood”), and Le Dossier noir (1955; “The Black File”)—brought him international acclaim.
On the lighter side Cayatte directed such romantic films as Les Amants de Vérones (1949; The Lovers of Verona), Piège pour Cendrillon (1965; A Trap for Cinderella), and L’Amour en question (1978; “The Love in Question”). Cayatte wrote or cowrote all of his films, several of which won major prizes at film festivals.