Raymond Rajaonarivelo

Raymond Rajaonarivelo (born 1949) is a Malagasy film director.

Life

Raymond Rajaonarivelo was born in Antananarivo in 1949. He studied filmmaking at the University of Montpellier and at the University of Paris.[1] Though living on the outskirts of Paris, he returns to Madagascar for filming.[2]

In the 1970s Rajaonarivelo made two Malagasy short films.[1] His debut feature film, Tabataba (1988), told the story of a village in the 1947 Malagasy Uprising. It was the first Malagasy film to be shown at the Cannes Film Festival, where it won the 1988 Audience Award. It also won the Jury award at the 1989 Taormina Film Fest, and first feature award at the 1989 Carthage Film Festival.[3]

Filmography

  • Izaho Lokanga Ianao Valiha [I am 'Lokanga', you are 'Valiha'], 1974
  • Tabataba [Rumour], 1988
  • Quand les etoiles rencontrent la mer [When the Stars Meet the Sea], 1996
  • (co-directed with Cesar Paes) Mahaleo, 2004
gollark: Like I said, most of the UI is done with web stuff, and it appears to run X with awesome (the window manager).
gollark: It's not, potentially because they are also very underpowered hardware.
gollark: <@670756765859708965> Some bizarre Linux thing.
gollark: I have a terminal and stuff installed, but there's not much I can do with it.
gollark: I have an e-ink kindle somewhere. Did you know that they run basically everything as root, and that the UI seems to mostly use web technologies for some bizarre reason?

References

  1. Roy Armes (2008). "Rajaonarivelo, Raymond". Dictionary of African Filmmakers. Indiana University Press. p. 109. ISBN 0-253-35116-2.
  2. Karine Blanchon (2010). "Raymond Rajaonarivelo's Cinema: Between Madagascar and France". In Verena Berger; Miya Komori (eds.). Polyglot Cinema: Migration and Transcultural Narration in France, Italy, Portugal and Spain. LIT Verlag Münster. pp. 127–. ISBN 978-3-643-50226-1.
  3. "Raymond Rajaonarivelo | Réalisateur | Zama Paris 2018". zama-diaspora.com. Retrieved 2018-11-12.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.