Germaine Dulac
Early female director of the Impressionist school with a background in theater and journalism. Dulac began making experimental films as early as 1915 but is best known for "The Smiling Madame Beudet" (1923) and the Antonin Artaud-scripted "The Seashell and the Clergyman" (1927). Dulac also wrote on the cinema as a critic and theorist, championing film as a medium distinct from the other visual arts. From 1930 she supervised the production of newsreel documentaries for Pathe-Journal, France Actualities-Gaumont and Le Cinema au Service de l'Histoire.
Filmography
Movies
Credit | |||||
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No Score Yet | No Score Yet | Princess Mandane | Director | - | 1928 |
No Score Yet | No Score Yet | Seashell and the Clergyman | Director | - | 1927 |
No Score Yet |
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The Smiling Madame Beudet | Director | - | 1923 |
No Score Yet | No Score Yet | The Cigarette | Director | - | 1919 |