Seminal French filmmaker Alain Resnais dies | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
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Seminal French filmmaker Alain Resnais dies

FILE - In this May 21, 2012 file photo, director Alain Resnais listens during a press conference for You Havent Seen Anything Yet at the 65th international film festival, in Cannes, southern France. Seminal filmmaker Alain Resnais, whose inventiveness in film made him among the world's cinema greats, has died Saturday March 1, 2014. He was 91. (AP Photo/Joel Ryan, File)

PARIS - Alain Resnais, the seminal French filmmaker whose cryptic "Last Year at Marianbad" extended its influence across generations, has died.

He was 91, and was editing drafts of his next project from his hospital bed, according to producer Jean-Louis Livi, who was working on the film with him.

Resnais, who died Saturday, was renowned for reinventing himself during each of his full-length films, which included the acclaimed "Hiroshima Mon Amour" in 1959 and most recently "Life of Riley" which was honoured at the Berlin Film Festival just weeks ago.

"He was a man of the highest quality, a genius," Livi told France Info radio on Sunday, confirming Resnais' death with "enormous sadness, accompanied by enormous pride."

"Last Year at Marianbad" is his most influential work, mixing fragments of time and weirdness within a castle. The 1961 film is routinely cited among the highest works of French New Wave artistry, although Resnais' career extended well beyond that period. It has been cited by fans as varied as filmmaker David Lynch and the late Jackie Kennedy, who screened the movie at the White House.

"I'm a bit surprised to be so shocked by the death of someone who was 91. Usually we take this news with a kind of calm sadness," said Danis Podalydes, an actor and director who worked with Resnais. "But the intellectual youth of this man was so surprising."

Thierry Fremaux, head of the Cannes Film Festival, said Resnais' films tended to fly past the festival's judges, who were not always enamoured of his work.

"He pushed the esthetic and narrative experimentation very far, and then he completely renewed his style," Fremeux told French network LCI.

News from © The Associated Press, 2014
The Associated Press

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