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Director

Original

André Delvaux

The film director André Delvaux was known as “the godfather of the Belgian film industry”, having put his small country on the film map after his first feature film, The Man Who Had His Hair Cut Short, won international acclaim in 1965. His works often mingled realism and fantasy in a style labelled “magic realism”. Though his films tended to find more favour with critics than public, he had great success with such titles as Un soir, un train (One Night . . . a Train, 1968) and Rendez-vous à Bray (Rendezvous in Bray, 1971).

Before the advent of Delvaux, Belgium had been known as a country that enthusiastically promoted international cinema via several film festivals and had an enviably extensive archive in its Cinemathèque Royale, but could boast no native film industry. Too small a country for a commercial film to make a profit through domestic success alone, and further fragmented by bilingualism, Belgium was once described by the… read more

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Displaying 3 wall posts.

Marcela Valdeavellano

27Mar12

dear EYE ,about your comment on my wall that André Delvaux is not the son of Paul Delvaux, perhaps you should research a little more before arguing about waht you are not so sure: http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Delvaux

Picture of Melodynelson

Melodynelson

25Sep10

Je souhaite a tous mes etudiant(e)s de voir ce film un jour, ou n'importe quel film de Delvaux!

Marcela Valdeavellano

20Sep10

I watcher this movie in 1969, and I have been searching it since. Delvaux is a poet and his father's surrealism is visible in this film.

  • Picture of eye

    eye

    27Mar12

    André Delvaux and Paul Delvaux are not related.

  • Marcela Valdeavellano

    27Mar12

    dear EYE ,about your comment on my wall that André Delvaux is not the son of Paul Delvaux, perhaps you should research a little more before arguing about waht you are not so sure: http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Delvaux

  • Picture of eye

    eye

    28Mar12

    Sorry, I didn't mean to offend in any way. But I'm sure of what I'm saying - I know this from several articles, and a lecture by a researcher who is a personal friend of André Delvaux (and one-time director of the Belgian Cinematek). The Spanish and Italian Wikipedia entries on both men are simply wrong. They provide no source for their claim and the Wikipedia entries in other languages make no such claim. But it is true that both men share some of their surrealism, and that the director was definitely inspired by the painter: http://users.telenet.be/eyeless/misc/delvaux.jpg

  • Marcela Valdeavellano

    28Mar12

    Maybe all bibliography I found is wrong then, and after all, it is not important. Thank you anyway, for looking for the black spot on the white paper.vIn the book "the Francophone film: a struggle for identity" you can find the same info: http://books.google.co.cr/books?id=suDmAWP6VzoC&pg=PA12&lpg=PA12&dq=Paul+Delvaux+is+the+father+of+Andre+Delvaux&source=bl&ots=PT7DpeCSd0&sig=NXUGrVViJlD5mwfnxxEODfLtUQs&hl=es&sa=X&ei=GDtyT__KJdChtwf29MD7Dw&sqi=2&ved=0CB4Q6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=Paul%20Delvaux%20is%20the%20father%20of%20Andre%20Delvaux&f=false

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