Benvenuta
Cast & Crew
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Andre Delvaux
Director
Fanny Ardant
Benvenuta
Vittorio Gassman
Livio
Francoise Fabian
Jeanne
Mathieu Carriere
Francois
Claire Wauthion
Inge
Film Details
Genre
Drama
Romance
Release Date
1983
Production Company
Fr3 Films Productions; Ugc; Ugc International
Distribution Company
Curzon Artificial Eye; Ugc; Ugc International
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 43m
Synopsis
Director
Andre Delvaux
Director
Cast
Fanny Ardant
Benvenuta
Vittorio Gassman
Livio
Francoise Fabian
Jeanne
Mathieu Carriere
Francois
Claire Wauthion
Inge
Philippe Geluck
Father
Anne Chappuis
Mother
Armando Marra
Singer
Renato Scarpa
Journalist
Franco Trevisi
Policeman
Franco Angrisano
Mysteries Villa Keeper
Tamara Trifez
Young Woman
Beatrice Palme
Biche
Franz Joubert
Gardner; Priest
Franco Bruno
Guide
Bert Andre
Waiter
Muriel Bueninck
Benvenuta--Child
Muriel Lefevre
Benvenuta--As A Small Child
Cristina Borgogni
2nd Woman
Jenny Tanghe
Neighbor
Toon Carette
Postman
Crew
Luciano Balducci
Production Supervisor (Italy)
Jean-claude Batz
Producer
Johannes Brahms
Music Extract ("Variations On A Theme By Paganini")
Vittorio Bucci
Production Manager (Naples)
Marc Cardijn
Assistant Director (Belgium)
F Chiaravalle
Song ("Il Maestro En La Principante" "Fenestra Vascia")
Rosine Delamare
Costume Designer
Andre Delvaux
Screenwriter
Frederic Devreese
Music
Pierre Foerster
Location Manager
Charlotte Fraisse
Production Supervisor
Antonio Gabrielli
Assistant Director (Italy)
Jean Goudier
Editor
Francoise Hardy
Art Direction Assistant
Albert Jurgenson
Editor
Maurice Laumain
Sound Editor Supervisor
Jerome Levy
Sound Effects
Suzanne Lilar
Source Material (From Novel)
Franco Mancarella
Production Manager (Milan)
Armando Marra
Song Performer ("Neopolitan Music")
Armando Marra
Song ("Il Maestro En La Principante")
Henri Morelle
Sound Recording
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Music Extract ("Adagio From Fantasy For Piano" "Sonata In C Minor")
Annalisa Nasalli
Costumes Supervisor
Carmen Pericolo
Wardrobe (Italy)
Claude Pignot
Set Design
Robert Schumann
Music Extract ("Fantaisiestuck Nr 1")
Vincenzo Testa
Production Manager (Rome)
Giuseppe Tinelli
Camera Operator (Italy)
Charles Van Damme
Director Of Photography
Jef Van De Water
Production Manager (Belgium)
Walther Vanden Ende
Camera Operator (Belgium)
Anne Verhoeven
Wardrobe (Belgium)
Film Details
Genre
Drama
Romance
Release Date
1983
Production Company
Fr3 Films Productions; Ugc; Ugc International
Distribution Company
Curzon Artificial Eye; Ugc; Ugc International
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 43m
Articles
TCM Remembers Andre Delvaux - Andre Delvaux (1926-2002)
He was born in March 21, 1926 Heverlee, near Louvain, Belgium. Delvaux studied German philosophy at the Free University of Brussels and piano at Belgium's Royal Conservatory, but his love for the cinema emerged in his early 20s, while he was working as a pianist accompanying silent pictures at the Belgian cinematheque. After becoming head of film education for Belgian teachers, he began making television documentaries, mostly on film directors, the most successful being a four-part series about Federico Fellini in 1960. Two years later, he helped found Insas, a film school that would produce many of Belgium's new generation of filmmakers.
His first film was the acclaimed feature, The Man Who Had His Hair Cut Short (1965). A unique story about a middle-aged lawyer's compulsive visits to the barber, which symbolized the psychosis brought on by his idealistic love for a pupil at a girls' school where he teaches. Elegantly shot in black-and-white by the celebrated Belgian cinematographer Ghislain Cloquet (who would work on five more features with Delvaux), the film, veered between beauty and ugliness, illusion and reality, and an interest in surrealism.
Delvaux's preoccupation with the merging of dream and reality - in the tradition of Flemish painters from Bosch to Magritte, was explored further in the stunning One Night, A Train (1968), starring Yves Montand as a nationalist Flemish professor living with Anouk Aimee, a French-speaking theatrical designer. One autumn evening, she disappears on a train journey, and he, in an unknown region, begins to look for her, while coming to terms with himself and their relationship. Delicately photographed by Cloquet, this sad story of lost love sublimely fused past and present, reality and fantasy.
Delvaux's output has been limited over the years, but there have been cinematic gems: the ethereal Belle (1973), where a middle-aged professor has an affair with a mysterious woman he meets in the woods and it's never revealed whether the woman is real or imaginary; the whimsical 90-minute documentary, To Woody Allen from Europe with Love (1980), with both directors sharing a love of young women, Bergman and surrealism; and the magnificent Benvenuta (1983), involving a writer who visits a famed author in Ghent to discuss how much of her writing is invention and how much is autobiographical, a plot that allowed Delvaux to play an elaborate game with reality and fantasy, and time and place, in a series of painterly-like images.
Unfortunately, Delvaux had been inactive from filmmaking since the late 1980's and his films have received very little distribution in the United States, and are not available on DVD or shown on cable television. His small following on these shores exists solely through word of mouth on the arthouse circuit and the odd film festival in major cities. The loss is ours. Granted, Delvaux's subject matter, hallucinatory textures and delicate execution may not be for all tastes, but for those so inclined, his films can be a uniquely rewarding and pleasurable experience.
by Michael T. Toole
TCM Remembers Andre Delvaux - Andre Delvaux (1926-2002)
Andre Delvaux, the Belgian director considered the father of his country's film industry and revered for bringing Belgian art films to international attention, died on October 4 of a heart attack in Valencia, Spain at the age of 76.
He was born in March 21, 1926 Heverlee, near Louvain, Belgium. Delvaux studied German philosophy at the Free University of Brussels and piano at Belgium's Royal Conservatory, but his love for the cinema emerged in his early 20s, while he was working as a pianist accompanying silent pictures at the Belgian cinematheque. After becoming head of film education for Belgian teachers, he began making television documentaries, mostly on film directors, the most successful being a four-part series about Federico Fellini in 1960. Two years later, he helped found Insas, a film school that would produce many of Belgium's new generation of filmmakers.
His first film was the acclaimed feature, The Man Who Had His Hair Cut Short (1965). A unique story about a middle-aged lawyer's compulsive visits to the barber, which symbolized the psychosis brought on by his idealistic love for a pupil at a girls' school where he teaches. Elegantly shot in black-and-white by the celebrated Belgian cinematographer Ghislain Cloquet (who would work on five more features with Delvaux), the film, veered between beauty and ugliness, illusion and reality, and an interest in surrealism.
Delvaux's preoccupation with the merging of dream and reality - in the tradition of Flemish painters from Bosch to Magritte, was explored further in the stunning One Night, A Train (1968), starring Yves Montand as a nationalist Flemish professor living with Anouk Aimee, a French-speaking theatrical designer. One autumn evening, she disappears on a train journey, and he, in an unknown region, begins to look for her, while coming to terms with himself and their relationship. Delicately photographed by Cloquet, this sad story of lost love sublimely fused past and present, reality and fantasy.
Delvaux's output has been limited over the years, but there have been cinematic gems: the ethereal Belle (1973), where a middle-aged professor has an affair with a mysterious woman he meets in the woods and it's never revealed whether the woman is real or imaginary; the whimsical 90-minute documentary, To Woody Allen from Europe with Love (1980), with both directors sharing a love of young women, Bergman and surrealism; and the magnificent Benvenuta (1983), involving a writer who visits a famed author in Ghent to discuss how much of her writing is invention and how much is autobiographical, a plot that allowed Delvaux to play an elaborate game with reality and fantasy, and time and place, in a series of painterly-like images.
Unfortunately, Delvaux had been inactive from filmmaking since the late 1980's and his films have received very little distribution in the United States, and are not available on DVD or shown on cable television. His small following on these shores exists solely through word of mouth on the arthouse circuit and the odd film festival in major cities. The loss is ours. Granted, Delvaux's subject matter, hallucinatory textures and delicate execution may not be for all tastes, but for those so inclined, his films can be a uniquely rewarding and pleasurable experience.
by Michael T. Toole
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States 1983
Released in United States July 1984 (Shown at FILMEX: Los Angeles International Film Exposition (International Cinema - Europe) July 5-20, 1984.)
Released in United States 1983
Released in United States July 1984