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  1. Julien Duvivier

    Julien Duvivier

    French film director

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  1. Julien Duvivier, on the right, with Italian writer Giovannino Guareschi, 1952. On his return to France, Duvivier experienced some difficulties in resuming his career. Panic (Panique) (1946), an exhaustive summary of the lowest of human instincts, was the most personal, darkest, and nihilistic of his works. It was a bitter failure with critics ...

    • French
    • 8 October 1896, Lille, France
    • 1919–1967
    • 29 October 1967 (aged 71), Paris, France
  2. Julien Duvivier (1896-1967) Julien Duvivier. Writer. Director. Producer. IMDbPro Starmeter See rank. Revered by such legendary fellow directors as Ingmar Bergman and Jean Renoir, Julien Duvivier is one of the most legendary figures in the history of French cinema. He is perhaps the most neglected of the "Big Five" of classic French cinema (the ...

    • January 1, 1
    • Lille, Nord, France
    • January 1, 1
    • Paris, France
  3. Julien Duvivier. Writer: Panique. Revered by such legendary fellow directors as Ingmar Bergman and Jean Renoir, Julien Duvivier is one of the most legendary figures in the history of French cinema. He is perhaps the most neglected of the "Big Five" of classic French cinema (the other four being Jean Renoir, Rene Clair, Jacques Feyder, and Marcel Carne), partly due to the uneven quality of his ...

    • October 3, 1896
    • October 30, 1967
  4. Julien Duvivier was born in Lille, France, on 8 October 1896. He started out as a stage actor in Paris in 1915. He worked at the Odéon under the direction of the reactionary André Antoine, whose realist approach left a lasting impression on the young Duvivier.

  5. Nov 5, 2015 · Eclipse Series 44: Julien Duvivier in the Thirties. MAN IN THE SHADOWS. Julien Duvivier was a master of the early sound film. Whether he was making a romance, mystery, comedy, or domestic drama, his use of the camera was always revelatory, and he showed an uncanny instinct for the ways sound could be put to poetic as well as narrative uses.

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  7. Julien Duvivier (born October 8, 1896, Lille, France—died October 29, 1967, Paris) was a motion-picture director who emerged as one of the “Big Five” of the French cinema in the 1930s. Duvivier’s use of “poetic realism,” which characterized the works of the avant-garde filmmakers of that decade, won him international acclaim.

  8. Julien Duvivier filmography. Julien Duvivier (8 October 1896, in Lille – 29 October 1967, in Paris) was a French film director. He rose to prominence in French cinema in the silent era, and directed some of the most notable films of the poetic realism in the 1930s, such as La belle équipe and Pépé le Moko. During World War II he worked in ...

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