
Directing
Born March 21, 1926 in Heverlee, Brabant, Belgium
André Albert Auguste Delvaux (21 March 1926 – 4 October 2002) was a Belgian film director. He co-founded the film school INSAS in 1962 and is regarded as the founder of the Belgian national cinema. Adapting works by writers such as Johan Daisne, Julien Gracq and Marguerite Yourcenar, he received international attention for directing magic realist films. Delvaux received the Louis Delluc Prize for Rendezvous at Bray (1971) and the André Cavens Award for Woman Between Wolf and Dog (1979) and The Abyss (1988). The king of Belgium made him a baron in 1996. The Académie André Delvaux is named after him and he posthumously received the first Honorary Magritte Award in 2011.

Zénon the Rebel
Self (archive footage)

Mag Bodard, un destin
Self (archive footage)

Antoine Bonfanti, sonic traces of an engaged listening
Self

Between Heaven and Earth
Le professeur

Janssen & Janssens draaien een film
Self

The Abyss

De droomproducenten
Self

Benvenuta

André Delvaux directs Benvenuta
Self

To Woody Allen from Europe with Love
Self

Woman Between Wolf and Dog

Met Dieric Bouts

Belle

Midi trente
Self

Appointment in Bray

One Night... a Train

The Man Who Had His Hair Cut Short

Behind the screens : Les demoiselles de Rochefort

Behind the screens : Jacques Demy’s Les demoiselles de Rochefort - Les décors

Fellini on “Second Look”