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French film director From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
René Vautier (French: [ʁəne votje]; 15 January 1928 – 4 January 2015) was a French film director. His films, which were often controversial with French authorities, addressed many issues, such as the Algerian War, French colonialism in Africa, pollution, racism, women's rights, and apartheid in South Africa.[1] Many were banned or condemned, and one caused him to go to prison for a year.
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René Vautier | |
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Born | Camaret-sur-Mer, France | 15 January 1928
Died | 4 January 2015 86) Cancale, France | (aged
Occupation | Film director |
Known for | Afrique 50 |
He was born on 15 January 1928 in Camaret-sur-Mer, Finistère, France, the son of a factory worker and a teacher.[2] He joined the French Resistance during World War II at the age of 15[3] and later received the Croix de guerre and the Order of the Nation from Charles de Gaulle for his militant activity.[2][4] He then joined the French Communist Party[5] and studied film-making at the Institut des hautes études cinématographiques, where he graduated in 1948.[6]
Vautier made his first film, Afrique 50, in 1950, when he was 21.[2][6] He was assigned to visit French West Africa and make an educational film,[6][7] but he was appalled by the conditions he witnessed, including lack of doctors and crimes committed by the French Army.[8] The resulting film was confiscated by police using legislation decreed by Pierre Laval, but Vautier managed to recover enough footage to publish the 17-minute film in 1950.[1] It was hailed as the first anti-colonial French film. He was indicted thirteen times for it and sentenced to a year in prison.[2][4] The documentary was banned for forty years.[5]
He worked with Louis Malle to make Humain, trop humain in 1973, a film about conditions in a Citroën car plant.[9] Vautier directed Peuple en marche, which gives the history of the National Liberation Army and the Algerian War, in 1963.[10] Another Algerian War film, Avoir 20 ans dans les Aurès (1972), won the International Federation of Film Critics Award at the 1972 Cannes Film Festival.[11][12] He made over 180 films, many of them destroyed by the French government.[9] Several of Vautier's other films were presented at Cannes, including Mourir pour des images, Comment on devient un ennemi de l'intérieur, Les trois cousins, and Vacances tunisiennes.[13] In January 1973, he went on hunger strike to protest film censorship.[1] He received the Order of the Ermine in 2000. On 4 January 2015, he died at a hospital in Cancale, Brittany.[3][14]
Capitalism
Colonisation, especially in Algeria
Racism in France
South-African Apartheid
Environment
Extreme-Right politics in France
Feminism
Bretagne
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