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Zoltán Fábri

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Occupation
  
Film director

Spouse
  
Noemi Apor (m. 1947–1994)

Role
  
Film director


Name
  
Zoltan Fabri

Years active
  
1951–1983

Children
  
Peter Fabri

Zoltan Fabri wwwbilselbattalcomwpcontentuploads201210IM

Born
  
15 October 1917 (
1917-10-15
)
Budapest, Austria-Hungary

Died
  
August 23, 1994, Budapest, Hungary

Nominations
  
Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film

Movies
  
The Fifth Seal, Merry‑Go‑Round, The Boys of Paul Street, The Toth Family, Professor Hannibal

Similar People
  
Peter Bacso, Mari Torocsik, Zoltan Latinovits, Imre Sarkadi, Noemi Apor

Two half times in hell 1962 zoltan fabri


Zoltán Fábri (15 October 1917 – 23 August 1994) was a Hungarian film director and screenwriter. His films The Boys of Paul Street (1969) and Hungarians (1978) were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. His 1965 film Twenty Hours shared the Grand Prix with War and Peace at the 4th Moscow International Film Festival. His 1969 film The Toth Family was entered into the 7th Moscow International Film Festival. His 1975 film 141 Minutes from the Unfinished Sentence was entered into the 9th Moscow International Film Festival, where he won a Special Prize for Directing.

Contents

Zoltán Fábri Bilsel Battal Zoltn FBRI

Fábri wanted to become an artist from an early age on. He studied painting and graduated at the Hungarian College of Fine Arts. He began working in the Hungarian film industry in 1950 as a production designer. He directed his first film Vihar (Storm) in 1951. He became an internationally acclaimed director with his third feature Körhinta (Merry Go-Round) in 1956. He continued directing and writing until the early 1980s. After his retirement from the film industry Fábri taught on the Hungarian University of Theatrical and Film Arts. In his last years he wrote screenplays; they were never made. Fábri was also the president of the Hungarian Film Artist Union from 1959 to 1981.

Zoltán Fábri httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Fábri's style of filmmaking can be described mainly as "classical", using academic techniques of art filmmaking. His greatest influences were the Italian Neorealism and French Poetic Realism. He experimented with narrative and flashback techniques for a while in the 1960s (in his films Nappali sötétség and Húsz óra) and his 1976 film Az ötödik pecsét contains some highly surrealist scenes, but overall he never used the mannerisms of modernist film in his works. For this reason the Kádár regime favored Fábri over more controversial and experimental directors like Miklós Jancsó. The film won the Golden Prize at the 10th Moscow International Film Festival and was entered into the 27th Berlin International Film Festival.

Zoltán Fábri Mvszvilg

At the 11th Moscow International Film Festival in 1979, he was awarded with the Honorable Prize for the contribution to cinema.

Zoltán Fábri Zoltan Fabri Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

He was known as a perfectionist who wrote, drawn and choreographed every scene to the most precise detail months before production began and never improvised anything. His reputation as a rigid, tyrannical director was somewhat contradicted by his friendly and kind behaviour towards the British and American child actors on the set of The Boys of Paul Street.

Fábri made nearly all of his films based on literary material (novels or short stories) and wrote the screenplays himself. His constant theme was the question of humanity. Many of his films are set in or around World War II. Two of his frequent collaborators were actress Mari Törőcsik and cinematographer György Illés. In 1969 he played the role of prosecuted statesman Zoltán Dániel in his friend Péter Bacsó's cult satire, A tanú (The Witness) as his sole acting job.

Fábri died in a heart attack at the age of 76 in 1994. His legal successor is Peter Fabri (b. 1985).

Filmography

  • Maddie the Goose-boy (1950) - director
  • Déryné (1951) - production designer
  • Vihar / Storm (1951) - director
  • Erkel (1952) - production designer
  • Életjel / Fourteen Lives (1954) - director
  • Dandin György, avagy a megcsúfolt férj (1955) - production designer
  • Körhinta / Merry Go-Round (1956) - director, screenwriter, production designer
  • Hannibál tanár úr / Professor Hannibal (1956) - director, screenwriter
  • Bolond április / Summer Clouds (1957) - director, production designer
  • Édes Anna / Sweet Anna (1958) - director, screenwriter, production designer
  • Dúvad / Brute (1961) - director, screenwriter
  • Két félidő a pokolban / The Last Goal) (1962) - director, screenwriter, production designer
  • Nappali sötétség / Darkness in Daytime (1963) - director, screenwriter, production designer
  • Vízivárosi nyár / Hard Summer (TV series) (1964) - director
  • Húsz óra / Twenty Hours (1965) - director
  • Útószezon / Late Season (1966) - director
  • A Pál-utcai fiúk / The Boys of Paul Street (1969) - director, screenwriter
  • Isten hozta, őrnagy úr! / The Tóth Family (1969) - director, screenwriter
  • A tanú / The Witness (1969) - actor
  • Hangyaboly / Ant Hill (1971) - director, screenwriter
  • Plusz-mínusz egy nap / Plus-Minus One Day (1973) - director, screenwriter
  • 141 perc a befejezetlen mondatból / 141 Minutes from the Unfinished Sentence (1975) - director
  • Az ötödik pecsét / The Fifth Seal (1976) - director, screenwriter
  • Magyarok / Hungarians (1978) - director, screenwriter
  • Fábián Bálint találkozása Istennel / Bálint Fábian Meets God (1980) - director, screenwriter
  • Requiem (1981) - director, screenwriter
  • Gyertek el a névnapomra / Housewarming (1983) - director, screenwriter
  • References

    Zoltán Fábri Wikipedia