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A collection of news and information related to Claude Chabrol published by this site and its partners.

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    Jan 3, 2011 | Orlando Sentinel
  1. Movie Preview: ‘Inspector Bellamy’

    Frankly My Dear - Orlando Sentinel
    This Claude Chabrol French murder mystery starring Gerard Depardieu is the film The Enzian has booked for this Friday, leading up to “Rabbit Hole,” which opens Jan. 14. It's about a celebrated police detective, on vacation, who dabbles in...
  2. Jan 5, 2011 | Orlando Sentinel
  3. Movie Review: ‘Inspector Bellamy’

    Frankly My Dear - Orlando Sentinel
    The late French filmmaker Claude Chabrol, who died in September at 80 after a long career in movies and TV, will be remembered for his place within the 1950s French New Wave (“Le Beau Serge, “1958) and such later movies  as “Story of...
  4. Jan 7, 2011 | Orlando Sentinel
  5. ‘Social Network’ is back, ‘True Grit’ owns the box office, ‘Season of the Witch,’ ‘Country’ fail, big time

    Frankly My Dear - Orlando Sentinel
    The guru says, and I agree, that there isn't a whole lot of box office heat behind the weekend's two new wide releases. “Country Strong” NEVER should have opened in larger cities before Mid-America. Has “G.I.Joe” taught us nothing?...
  6. Mar 10, 2010 | Los Angeles Times
  7. Bong Joon-ho's 'Mother' expertly ratchets up the intense suspense.

    Brand X
    The explosion of South Korean cinema in the last decade or so has been extraordinary to watch. Not long after the vibrant Hong Kong industry started losing its momentum, Korea began to take up the slack. Extraordinary filmmakers such as Park Chan-wook ("...
  8. Aug 26, 2010 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  9. Honorary Oscar recipients named

    The Board of Governors of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences said Wednesday that it would present "The Godfather" director-producer Francis Ford Coppola with the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award and give honorary Oscars to British film historian and preservationist Kevin Brownlow, French "New Wave" director Jean-Luc Godard, who made his feature directorial debut 50 years ago with the seminal "Breathless," and veteran actor Eli Wallach, who has appeared in such films as "The Magnificent Seven" and "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly."
    The Board of Governors of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences said Wednesday that it would present "The Godfather" director-producer Francis Ford Coppola with the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award and give honorary Oscars to British film...

    Tags: Walt Disney, Elia Kazan, Quentin Tarantino, Francis Ford Coppola, Oliver Stone

  10. Sep 12, 2010 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  11. Claude Chabrol dies at 80; French film director was a founder of New Wave movement

    Director Claude Chabrol, one of the founders of the New Wave movement that revolutionized French cinema, died Sunday. He was 80.
    Director Claude Chabrol, one of the founders of the New Wave movement that revolutionized French cinema, died Sunday. He was 80. Christophe Girard, who is responsible for cultural matters at Paris City Hall, announced Chabrol's death. No cause was given....

    Tags: The New York Times, Film Festivals, Eric Rohmer, Career and Workplace, Alfred Hitchcock

  12. May 25, 2007 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  13. 'Poison Friends'

    The French can't be beat for depicting sheer nastiness because they do it with such style and relish. Almost any Claude Chabrol film will do as an example, and a classic instance is H.G. Clouzot's controversial 1943 thriller "Le Corbeau," about a small-town poison-pen letter writer in occupied France.
    Special to The Times
    The French can't be beat for depicting sheer nastiness because they do it with such style and relish. Almost any Claude Chabrol film will do as an example, and a classic instance is H.G. Clouzot's controversial 1943 thriller "Le Corbeau," about a small-...

    Tags: Literature, Education, Arts and Culture, University of Paris

  14. Jan 13, 2009 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  15. Claude Berri, French filmmaker and actor, dies at 74

    Times Wire Reports
    Claude Berri, the French filmmaker who was a fixture in his country's film industry for more than 50 years and is perhaps best known for directing "Jean de Florette," which earned him international acclaim, died Monday. He was 74. Berri, whose short film...

    Tags: Salvador Dali, Death, Roman Polanski, Alberto Giacometti, Jean-Jacques Annaud

  16. Oct 10, 2008 |Story| Orlando Sentinel
  17. Movie review: A Girl Cut in Two -- 3 out of 5 stars

    Sentinel Movie Critic
    Gorgeous French women litter the landscape of Claude Chabrol's subtle, sinister and utterly implausible A Girl Cut in Two. They're trophy wives who tolerate their womanizing husbands' affairs, society heiresses, hookers, TV talkers and ex-models who are...

    Tags: Tell No One (movie), Entertainment, Television, Stanford White, A Girl Cut in Two (movie)

  18. Mar 30, 2007 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  19. 'For Ever Godard' celebrates a New Wave master

    Jean-Luc Godard is not merely the iconoclastic, indefatigable <I>enfant terrible</I> of France's New Wave but one of the most idiosyncratic and important filmmakers of the 20th century, whose innovative spirit continues to flourish into the 21st.
    Special to The Times
    Jean-Luc Godard is not merely the iconoclastic, indefatigable enfant terrible of France's New Wave but one of the most idiosyncratic and important filmmakers of the 20th century, whose innovative spirit continues to flourish into the 21st. His...

    Tags: Television, Comedy (genre), Armand Hammer, Wars and Interventions, Billy Wilder

  20. Aug 2, 2007 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  21. In tackling the big questions, Antonioni raised the bar for filmmakers

    Special to The Times
    ++++++++++++++++++++ || || ++++++++++++++++++++ How ironic -- yet oddly fitting -- that Michelangelo Antonioni should die in Italy, at 94, the day after Ingmar Bergman died at 89 in Sweden. At the time of their deaths they were arguably Europe's two...

    Tags: Death, DVDs and Movies, Cinema Industry, Entertainment, Monica Vitti

  22. Aug 16, 2002 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  23. 'Merci Pour le Chocolat'

    Times Staff Writer
    When director Claude Chabrol cast Isabelle Huppert in the title role of his 1978 "Violette," as a notorious real-life teenage killer leading a double life, he found in her the ideal actress to express his career-long fascination with how bourgeoise...

    Tags: Death, Comedy (genre), Health, Pasadena (Los Angeles, California), Cinema Industry

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Claude Chabrol Photos
Meat is murder. (Claude Chabrol, 1969)
(February 19, 2013)
'Le Boucher'
In this French animated effort sometimes recalling both...
(September 24, 2012)
'The Day of the Crows' (France)
prime minister says, "French cinema has lost one of its...
(September 14, 2010)
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