Occupation Film director Siblings Sandor Marai Role Film director | Name Geza Radvanyi Years active 1947–1980 | |
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Born 26 September 1907 ( 1907-09-26 ) Kassa, Kingdom of Hungary, Austro-Hungarian Empire (now Kosice in eastern Slovakia) Spouse Maria von Tasnady (m. 1937–1986), Eva Maria Daghofer (m. 1930–1937) Parents Margit Ratkovszky, Geza Grosschmid Movies Somewhere in Europe, Madchen in Uniform, Uncle Tom\'s Cabin, An Angel on Wheels, The Doctor of Stalingrad Similar People Maria von Tasnady, Lilli Palmer, O W Fischer, Christa Winsloe, Bela Balazs |
Muchachas de uniforme | Géza Radványi | 1958
Donne senza nome (1949)
Géza von Radványi (26 September 1907 – 27 November 1986) was a Hungarian film director, cinematographer, producer and writer.
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Géza von Radványi est non-seulement un des plus grands créateurs du cinéma mondial, mais avant, et au-dessus, cet être rare, fabuleux, presque invraisemblable : un homme fraternel
Biography
Born Géza Grosschmid, he took the name Radványi from his paternal grandmother. His brother was the writer Sándor Márai. Géza von Radványi made his debut in journalism before moving to cinema in 1941. He aimed to create a popular cinema in the 1950s and 1960s that would rival Hollywood studios, due to European coproductions.
He began at the end of the 1940s, with Valahol Európában and Women Without Names, neorealist dramas with no concession to the ravages of war and the postwar period. During the 1950s, Radványi changed his style: L'Étrange Désir de monsieur Bard, with Michel Simon and Geneviève Page (1953), and, above all, the success of his remake of Mädchen in Uniform with Lilli Palmer, Marthe Mercadier and the young rising star, Romy Schneider (1958). He also made in the same decade Douze heures d'horloge, a thriller based on a script by Boileau and Narcejac, with Lino Ventura and Laurent Terzieff, as well as a slapstick comedy, Mademoiselle Ange with Romy Schneider and Henri Vidal (1959).
During the 1960s, he became both more ambitious and more bankable, making 70 mm coproductions like, Onkel Toms Hütte with Mylène Demongeot and Herbert Lom (1965), and Der Kongreß amüsiert sich with Lilli Palmer, Curd Jürgens, Paul Meurisse and Françoise Arnoul (1966), both of which were rather unsuccessful.
In contrast, he surprisingly wrote the script for the successful film produced by Louis de Funès, L'homme orchestre, directed by Serge Korber (1970). His 1961 film Das Riesenrad was entered into the 2nd Moscow International Film Festival. His 1965 film Uncle Tom's Cabin was entered into the 4th Moscow International Film Festival.
Géza von Radványi ended his career with a modest production made in his home country, Circus Maximus (1980).