
Directing
François Arnold Reichenbach (3 July 1921 – 2 February 1993) was a French film director, cinematographer producer and screenwriter. He directed 40 films between 1954 aEarly life François Reichenbach was born in 1921 in Neuilly-sur-Seine. His father Bernard Reichenbach was a successful businessman and his mother Germaine Angèle Sarah Monteux had a passion for music, which she passed on to young François. His maternal grandfather Gaston Monteux was a wealthy industrialist: he was one of the first to buy paintings by Chagall, Braque, Picasso, Soutine, Utrillo and Modigliani. In his memoirs François Reichenbach says: "At the age of five I was terrified by all the faces in the paintings. And I became a forger. I added mustaches and hairs to the nudes of Modigliani. This hoax takes on another dimension when you know that I made a film with Orson Welles about the forger Elmyr de Hory in 1973. He is the nephew of the industrialist and manuscript and book collector Jacques Guérin and the cousin of the film producer Pierre Braunberger, who encouraged him to make films. During the Second World War, François Reichenbach went to Geneva. Although he was born in France, he also has Swiss nationality because his paternal grandfather, Arnold Reichenbach, is a rich Swiss industrialist working in the embroidery industry in St. Gallen. He studied music at the Geneva Conservatory of Music, where he met the film director Gérard Oury. After the Liberation, he wrote songs, notably for Édith Piaf and Marie Dubas. Then, remembering the huge collection of paintings of his childhood, he left for the United States with an emigrant card to sell paintings. He started in New York as an advisor to American museums for the purchase of works of art in Europe, then he sold master paintings. He spent several years in the United States. On his deathbed, François Reichenbach confided to Danièle Thompson his wish to be buried in Limoges where he had spent his vacations in his youth. Faced with the protests of the screenwriter, arguing that it would be inconvenient to visit him, the filmmaker replied "Those who love me will take the train". This quote inspired Danièle Thompson to write the title of the film Ceux qui m'aiment prendront le train (Those who love me will take the train) by Patrice Chéreau, starring Jean-Louis Trintignant, Charles Berling and Vincent Perez. François Reichenbach died on February 2, 1993, in Neuilly-sur-Seine, a posh neighbourhood near the capital. He is buried in the Louyat cemetery in Limoges. This pioneer of the New Wave through the importance of his cinematographic work makes this man, with a free and respectful look at others, a privileged witness of his time. He always has a camera loaded on the back seat of his car to film immediately just in case, because he likes to "film everything that moves ". The famous magazine Cahiers du cinéma wrote: "François Reichenbach was born with a camera in his eye". ... Source: Article "François Reichenbach" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.
movieLe Japon insolite
1983
Director
movieHouston, Texas
1981
Director
movieSex O’Clock USA
1976
Director
movieL’Indiscret
1974
Director
movieF for Fake
1973
Co-Director, Director
movieJ'ai tout donné
1972
Director
movieMedicine Ball Caravan
1971
Director
movieDecameron '69
1969
Director
movieMexico Mexico
1968
Director
movie13 Days in France
1968
Director
movieSpécial Bardot
1968
Director
moviePortrait d'Orson Welles
1968
Director
tvPour le plaisir
1964
Director
movieVillage Sweetness
1964
Director
Lomelin
1964
Director
movieLe Paris des mannequins
1963
Director
movieThe Little Café
1963
Director
movieIn Memory of Rock
1963
Director
movieIlluminations
1963
Director
movieThe Winner
1961
Director
movieThe Marines
1957
Director
movieHouston Texas
1956
Director
movieVisages de Paris
1955
Director
movieLast Spring
1954
Director
movieNus Masculins
1954
Director
movieMichel Legrand, sans demi-mesure
2018
Self (archive footage)
movieL’Indiscret
1974
François Reichenbach
movieL’Indiscret
1974
Screenplay
movieF for Fake
1973
Writer
movieThe Right of the Maddest
1973
Writer, Adaptation
movieThe Little Café
1963
Writer
movieForty Deuce
1982
Director of Photography
movieF for Fake
1973
Director of Photography
movieMexico Mexico
1968
Director of Photography
movieThe Sixth Side of the Pentagon
1968
Director of Photography
moviePortrait d'Orson Welles
1968
Director of Photography
movieBizet Carmen
1967
Director of Photography
movieVillage Sweetness
1964
Director of Photography
movieThe Lovers of the France
1964
Director of Photography
movieThe Little Café
1963
Director of Photography
movieAmerica as Seen by a Frenchman
1960
Director of Photography
Impressions de New York
1956
Director of Photography
movieF for Fake
1973
Executive Producer
movieRepeated Absences
1972
Producer