Clément Maurice (March 22, 1853 – July 15, 1933) was a French photographer, film director, and producer.
From 1898 to 1906, he was the cameraman for surgeon Eugène Doyen for whom he filmed for educational purposes around sixty operations.
In 1899, the production company Association frères Lumière hired him as a cinematographer collaborator and technician for the shooting of the film Excursion automobile Paris-Meulan.
Quickly, he started producing and directing feature films such as Le Duel d'Hamlet or Cyrano de Bergerac.
With Henri Lioret, he developed the Phono-Cinema-Theater, a pioneering system of sound cinema, presented at the Universal Exhibition of 1900.