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Frédéric Rossif (August 14, 1922 - April 18,
1990) was a French film and television
director who specialized primarily on documentaries, frequently using
archive footage. Rossif's common themes included wildlife, 20th
century history and contemporary artists. He frequently
collaborated with notable composers Maurice Jarre and Vangelis.
Life
Rossif was born in Cetinje, Montenegro, former Yugoslavia. His family was killed during the
Second World War.
He studied in Rome in late 1930s
and early 1940s before joining the French Foreign Legion's 13th Demi-Brigade in
1944. After the war, in 1945 Rossif established himself in Paris and worked at Club
Saint-Germain. During those years he got acquainted with Jean-Paul
Sartre, Boris
Vian, Albert
Camus, Ernest Hemingway and Malcolm Lowry among
others.
Since 1948 Rossif actively collaborated with the Cinémathèque Française,
organizing, among other things, an avant-garde festival at Antibes in 1949-50. In 1952 he
joined the ORTF. Some of the first projects he
participated in include Cinq colonnes à la une,
Éditions spéciales, La Vie des animaux and François
Chalais' Cinépanorama (1956) (producer); La
Villa Santo-Sospir (1952), a documentary about a villa
decorated by Jean
Cocteau (assistant director) and Si
Versailles m'était conté (1954), in which he acted.
In late 1950s Rossif began writing and directing his own films,
quickly achieving a considerable degree of success. His 1963 film
about the Spanish Civil War, Mourir a
Madrid received the Prix Jean Vigo that year, and was also
nominated for an Academy Award for Documentary Feature.
Several of his 1960s films were scored by the celebrated French
composer Maurice
Jarre. In 1970 Rossif completed his only non-documentary film,
Aussi loin que l'amour, featuring Salvador Dalí
as one of the actors.
In early 1970s Rossif met the Greek composer Vangelis, who was working in Paris at the
time. The two collaborated on a large number of films, most notably
the wild-life documentaries L'Apocalypse des animaux,
L'Opéra sauvage and La Fête
sauvage, some of the music from which was released on CD.
Vangelis' music for an ocean scene from the 6th episode of
L'Apocalypse, called "La Petite Fille de la Mer",
subsequently became a modern classic. In 1980 Rossif directed a
documentary dedicated to Vangelis, called L'Arbre de
vie.
Rossif died in 1990 and was buried in the Cimetière du
Montparnasse in Paris. His
last projects included the monumental World War II documentary De Nuremberg
à Nuremberg (1989) and Pasteur le Siecle, a
documentary commemorating the 100th anniversary of L'Institut
Pasteur (1987), a departure from the director's usual
themes.
Partial
filmography
Wildlife:
- La Vie des animaux (TV series broadcast during the
1950s, producer)
- Nos Amis les bêtes (TV series broadcast during the
1950s, producer)
- 1963, Les Animaux*
- 1970-1971, L'Apocalypse des Animaux (TV series, 6
episodes)**
- 1975-1981, L'Opéra sauvage (TV series, 22
episodes)**
- 1975, La fête sauvage (feature film), on African wildlife**
- 1984, Sauvage et beau (feature film)**
- 1986, Splendeur Sauvage (compilation)**
- 1989, Beaute Sauvage (compilation)**
- 1989, Les Animaux de Frédéric Rossif
(compilation)**
Art and music:
- 1971, Cantique des Creatures (?)
- 1971, Georges Mathieu ou la fureur
d'être**
- 1972, Au Pays de Visages, on photographer Gisèle Freund**
- 1974, Georges Braque ou le temps
différent**
- 1981, Jacques
Brel
- 1981, Pablo
Picasso peintre**
- 1980, Des compagnons pour vos songes
- 1983, Les grandes demoiselles, Etienne Hajdu,
sculpteur on sculptor Etienne Hajdu
- 1985, La fête de la musique (festival à Paris)
- 1986, Le Cœur musicien
- 1989, Morandi, on painter Giorgio Morandi**
Others:
- 1959, Imprévisibles nouveautés, about the petroleum industry,
commemorating the 100th anniversary of Edwin Drake's oil well drilling
- 1959, Spécial Noël: Jean Gabin
- 1961, Le Temps du ghetto, about the Jewish ghettos in
Warsaw, Poland*
- 1961, Vél d'Hiv (short film), about sports at the
Vélodrome d'hiver, rue Nélaton (15e)*
- 1962, De notre temps (short film)
- 1963, Mourir à Madrid, about the Spanish Civil
War*
- 1963, Pour l'Espagne, on Spain*
- 1964, Encore Paris (short film)*
- 1966, La chute de Berlin, about the fall of
Berlin
- 1966, La Liberté de blâmer (short film), about the
life of a daily newspaper (?)
- 1966, Donner à voir (TV series, 3 episodes), about
first films about foreign countries
- 1966, Un roi en Bavière, about the life of Ludwig II
of Bavaria
- 1967, La Révolution d'octobre, on the October
Revolution; includes material from Dziga Vertov's Man
with a Movie Camera.
- 1968, Un mur à Jérusalem, on the history of Jews
- 1969, Pourquoi l'Amérique?, on American history from
1917 to 1939
- 1971, Aussi loin que l'amour (Rossif's only
non-documentary film)
- 1976, Les Crèches du monde
- 1976, Plus vite que le soleil (short film), on the Concorde. Later released as
part of Un Ciel Signé Concorde (not a Rossif
production)**
- 1978, Heureux comme le regard en France, on
contemporary French art (?), see [1]
- 1980, Une prière qui danse
- 1981, L'arbre de vie, about Vangelis**
- 1983, Pour la musique (?)
- 1987, Pasteur le Siecle, commemorating the 100th
anniversary of the Pasteur Institute**
- 1989, De Nuremberg à Nuremberg (four hours long 4-part
special), on the Nuremberg Trials**
- 1989, Tatie Danielle (as actor)
- 1990, Les Sentinelles oubliées, on American communists (?), see [2]**
In the list, * denotes films scored by Maurice Jarre and ** denotes films scored
by Vangelis. Many of
Vangelis' works created for Rossif are used more than in one
film.
See also