The Debussy Film

The Debussy Film: Impressions of the French Composer is a 1965 British TV film about Claude Debussy. It was written by Melvyn Bragg and directed by Ken Russell.

The Debussy Film
Directed byKen Russell
Produced byKen Russell
Written byMelvyn Bragg
Ken Russell
StarringOliver Reed
CinematographyKen Westbury
Release date
18 May 1965
Running time
82 mins
CountryUK
LanguageEnglish

It marked the first collaboration between Ken Russell and Oliver Reed. Russell cast Reed after seeing him in The System.[1] It was the second last film Russell made for BBC's Monitor. Always on Sunday would be the last.

Plot

A film company shoots a dramatised account of the life of the French composer Claude Debussy

Cast

Production

Debussy's estate disliked the film and prevented repeat screenings.[2]

gollark: Parallel is good if you have two things *which yield* and want to run them simultaneously.
gollark: `parallel` can do that quite simply.
gollark: That does seem... relevant, but also complex to implement and probably overkill for just detecting line vs parabola.
gollark: You can *approximate* just checking if it's going in a straight line...
gollark: Actually, if you want to detect just whether it's going straight up or down as opposed to other directions that's easier.

References

  1. Oliver Burns--at the Stake and at Film Critics Kramer, Carol. Chicago Tribune 22 Aug 1971: e3.
  2. KEN RUSSELL'S THE DEBUSSY FILM (1965) Tibbetts, John C. Historical Journal of Film, Radio, and Television; Dorchester-on-Thames Vol. 25, Iss. 1, (Mar 2005): 81-99.
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