Suzanne Baron | |
---|---|
Born | Nice, France | June 18, 1927
Died | December 20, 1995 68) (aged |
Occupation | Film editor |
Suzanne Baron (June 18, 1927 - December 20, 1995 [1] ) was a French film editor active from the 1950s through the 1990s. She edited her first film in 1952. [2] Baron is known for her collaborations with filmmakers like Louis Malle and Werner Herzog. [3] [4]
Louis Marie Malle was a French film director, screenwriter, and producer who worked in both French cinema and Hollywood. Described as "eclectic" and "a filmmaker difficult to pin down", Malle made documentaries, romances, period dramas, and thrillers. He often depicted provocative or controversial subject matter.
The Prix des Deux Magots is a major French literary prize. It is presented to new works, and is generally awarded to works that are more off-beat and less conventional than those that receive the more mainstream Prix Goncourt.
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The French Syndicate of Cinema Critics has, each year since 1946, awarded a prize, the Prix Méliès, to the best French film of the preceding year. More awards have been added over time: the Prix Léon Moussinac for the best foreign film, added in 1967; the Prix Novaïs-Texeira for the best short film, added in 1999; prizes for the best first French and best first foreign films, added in 2001 and 2014, respectively; etc.
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