Bernard Devlin (director)

Bernard Devlin (September 2, 1923  1983) was a Canadian film producer, script writer and director, who played an important role in the development of the National Film Board of Canada.

Bernard Devlin
Born(1923-09-02)September 2, 1923
Died1983
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
OccupationFilm director
Film producer
Screenwriter
Years active1946 - 1976

Born in Quebec City, he studied at Loyola University. Devlin joined the Royal Navy and served in the Atlantic and Mediterranean. He joined the National Film Board in 1946 and became director of French production in 1953. Devlin was a director for a series of documentaries in the direct cinema style known as On the Spot (Sur le vif in French). From 1954 to 1956, he worked with Radio-Canada, helping to establish French-language television programming. Devlin returned to the National Film Board in 1959, directing French-language television programs, and was director of French production again from 1960 to 1961. In 1959 he directed his most famous film Les Brûlés. He worked mainly on English films from 1964 to 1974.[1]

Selected works

  • Contrat de travail (1950) - Short
  • The Bird Fancier (L'Homme aux oiseaux) (1952) - Short
  • On the Spot (1953-4) - Series
  • Les Suspects (1956) - Short
  • Alfred J. (1956)
  • Que Dieu vous soit en aide (1956)
  • Les brûlés (1957) - series of television dramas
  • L'héritage (1960)
  • Dubois et Fils (1961)
  • A Question of Identity: War of 1812 (1966) - Short
  • Once Upon a Prime Time (1966) - Short
  • A Case of Eggs (1974)
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References

  1. Guide to the Cinema(s) of Canada (2001) Rist, Peter ISBN 0-313-29931-5 pp. 56-57
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