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32 jours avant
le festival Direct from the rue du Premier-Film : > Clint Eastwood, premier lauréat du prix Lumière, par Le Figaro
> Clint Eastwood raconte : "Mes souvenirs de cinéma", par le Progrès> Pari gagné pour le festival Lumière 2009 de Lyon, par Le Point> Lyon et sa banlieue célèbrent le cinéma des cinéastes, par Le Monde
> "Et pour quelques films de plus" par Télérama> "Pleine lumière sur le film noir dans le Grand Lyon" par Samuel Blumenfeld> Entretien avec Philippe Garnier, par LibéLyon
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly
by Sergio Leone
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Marcel Carné and The Devil's EnvoysThe screening of The Devil's Envoys (Les Visiteurs du soir) during the Festival is a chance to pay tribute to major French director Marcel Carné, who also made Drôle de drame, Le Quai des brumes and Le Jour se lève > > more
Ennio Morricone, il maestroHe's not just a musician, he's a legend. His more than 500 compositions have made him known around the world to young and old. Dozens of his pieces are among the classics of cinema music. The Festival pays tribute to him through its screening of Sergio Leone's films. > > more
Angie Dickinson - an angel passes byThe screening of Don Siegel's The Killers during the Festival, shows the wonderful Angie Dickinson in one of the major roles of her career, alongside Lee Marvin and John Cassavetes. > > more
Jerry Schatzberg, student of the shadowsHe directed American film classics of the 1970s, such as Puzzle of a Downfall Child, Scarecrow and The Panic in Needle Park, but is also a noted photographer. He accepted the Festival's invitation to take pictures of of Lyon, city of the Lumière brothers. > > more
Henri-Georges Clouzot, beyond L'EnferSerge Bromberg's work of documenting the story of Clouzot's making of L'Enfer (starring Romy Schneider and Serge Reggiani) which was cut short in 1964 after only three weeks of shooting, is a chance for the Festival to pay tribute to the prolific Clouzot, who directed The Murderer Lives at Number 21, (L'Assassin habite... au 21), The Raven (Le Corbeau), The Quay of the Goldsmiths (Quai des Orfèvres), The Wages of Fear (Le Salaire de la peur) and Les Diaboliques. > > more
Jacques Bral, a return to noirBral is a quiet and unprolific filmaker (only four feature films in 30 years) who nevertheless deeply impressed a generation of cinemagoers with his impeccable Exterior Night in 1980. The screening of a restored version of the film will be one of the Festival's highlights. > > more
Terence Hill, guest starMany know actor and director Hill but not many are aware his real name is Mario Girotti and that he was born in Venice in 1939. The Festival is screening the film he made with Damiano Damiani, A Genius, Two Friends and an Idiot, and one he made with Tonino Valerii, My Name is Nobody, both of them produced by Sergio Leone. > > more
Eddie Muller, the Prince of NoirEddie Muller was an obvious choice to be involved in the Festival's plan to show a selection of films noirs. He's a writer and self-styled "cultural archaeologist" who lives in San Francisco and has become a world expert on Hollywood noir films. > > more
Julien Duvivier, maker of French classicsDuvivier left a strong and lasting mark on French cinema between 1930 and 1960 and the Festival will screen a restored version of his classic Escape from Yesterday (La Bandera, 1935). Among his most original films were Pépé le Moko (1937), Panic (Panique, 1937) and Deadlier Than the Male (Voici le temps des assassins, 1956). > > more
Cyd Charisse ("The Legs")The Festival screening of Vincente Minnelli’s Brigadoon will allow us to once more see Cyd Charisse, the dance icon of film who died in 2008, in the unforgettable role of Fiona Campbell alongside Gene Kelly. > > more
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