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Karel Reisz (1926–2002)

Author of The French Lieutenant's Woman [1981 film]

16+ Works 386 Members 3 Reviews

About the Author

Works by Karel Reisz

The French Lieutenant's Woman [1981 film] (1981) 132 copies, 2 reviews
Sweet Dreams [1985 film] (1986) — Director — 44 copies
Who'll Stop the Rain [1978 film] (1978) — Director — 10 copies
Everybody Wins [1990 film] (2005) — Director — 5 copies
Woodfall: A Revolution in British Cinema (2018) — Director — 4 copies
The Gambler [1974 film] (1974) — Director — 3 copies
Isadora [1968 film] (1968) — Director — 3 copies
Night Must Fall [1964 film] (1964) — Director — 1 copy

Associated Works

March to Aldermaston — Director — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Reisz, Karel
Birthdate
1926-07-21
Date of death
2002-11-25
Gender
male
Nationality
Czechoslovakia (birth)
UK
Birthplace
Ostrava, Czechoslovakia
Place of death
Camden, London, England, UK
Cause of death
blood disorder
Places of residence
London, England, UK
Education
Leighton Park School, Reading, England, UK
Cambridge University (Emmanual College)
Occupations
film director
filmmaker
film critic
Holocaust survivor
theater director
Relationships
Blair, Betsy (wife|1963-2002)
Anderson, Lindsay (colleague)
Short biography
Karel Reisz was born to a Jewish family in Ostrava, Czechoslovakia (present-day Czech Republic). His parents were Fritzi and Josef Reisz, a lawyer. He had an older brother, Paul. In 1938, his parents put 12-year-old Karel alone on a Kindertransport to the UK for safety from the threatened Nazi invasion of his country. Paul was already in England when he arrived. Reisz spoke almost no English at the time, but learned it quickly. After attending Leighton Park, a Quaker school in Reading, he joined the Royal Air Force toward the end of World War II, serving as a fighter pilot in a Czech squadron. He later found out that his parents were both murdered at the Nazi death camp at Auschwitz. After his war service, Reisz studied chemistry at Cambridge University, and co-founded an influential film journal called Sequence with Lindsay Anderson, Peter Ericsson, and Gavin Lambert in 1947. He began to contribute to other film journals, including Sight and Sound. In 1953, with Gavin Millar, he published The Technique of Film Editing, an acclaimed book that has rarely been out of print since. After working as a program planner at the National Film Theatre, Reisz became a driving force behind the Free Cinema movement, a counterpart of the literary "Angry Young Men." He had his first major success as a director in 1960 with Saturday Night and Sunday Morning, one of the seminal works of the British New Wave. He made a total of 11 feature films over 40 years, noted for their intelligence, polish, and psychological acuity. In later years, Reisz worked increasingly as a theater director, staging plays by Harold Pinter and Samuel Beckett.

Members

Reviews

Warner is fantastic as a loony artist doing everything within his twisted power to keep his wife, Vanessa Redgrave, who is divorcing him to marry a boring--but rather admirably calm--art gallery owner. Redgrave was nominated for an Oscar, and she is very good, but Warner steals the show, as he tends to do in many of his roles. Irene Handl is great as his Marxist mother. Nice scenes of London, including a visit to Marx's grave and the inevitable gates of Wormwood Scrubs. Anarchic but entertaining and even a bit touching.… (more)
 
Flagged
datrappert | Jan 21, 2022 |
Well acted and well worth two hours of your time. But the conceit of two parallel stories, one Victorian and one modern to achieve a distancing effect similar to the book within a book, looks increasingly like a cop-out rather than something innovative or clever.
 
Flagged
ponsonby | 1 other review | Jun 6, 2021 |

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Statistics

Works
16
Also by
2
Members
386
Popularity
#62,660
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
3
ISBNs
32
Languages
3

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