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Gilbert Dassonville

Gilbert Dassonville

Directing

Biography

Gilbert Dassonville was a film and documentary director, as well as a cinematographer and cameraman, who distinguished himself in French cinema during the second half of the 20th century. Gilbert Dassonville was a documentary filmmaker whose experience as a cinematographer was used to create a keen eye for reality, whether documenting mountaineering feats, scientific or educational films, all shot with precision and realism. His experience as a cameraman gave him a concrete sense of framing and movement, which imbued his directing with great visual rigor. This concern for storytelling through images connects him to other French documentary filmmakers of his generation, committed to exploring landscapes and people. Gilbert Dassonville shared his life with the director, producer, and actress Hélène Dassonville, born Marie-Hélène Adrienne Viala-Ricardou, who adopted his name after their marriage. Already known as an actress in French cinema in the 1930s and 1940s, Hélène then devoted herself to directing and producing documentaries, particularly about the mountains, with her film "Le Pilier De La Solitude" with Michel Vaucher, awarded at the Trento Mountain Film Festival, the making of the film "Les Habitants des Flammes de Pierre" was directed by Gilbert Dassonville. Hélène produced other documentaries by Gilbert Dassonville, including "Abîmes," which won an award at the Trento Film Festival in 1973. The couple thus formed a true cinematic partnership, combining two complementary paths—producer and director—around documentary filmmaking and the formal rigor of the image, all in a shared commitment to a certain filmmaking craft. Known for his spectacular filming in extreme conditions and on scientific expeditions, and a multiple award winner at documentary festivals, Gilbert Dassonville was frequently sought after as a cameraman and director of photography for numerous feature films, including fiction, adventure, and action films such as "Les Chemins De Katmandou" (1969) with Jane Birkin, "Le Paria" (1969) with Jean Marais, and "Le Spécialiste" (1969) with Johnny Hallyday, among others.

Known For

The Specialists
5.7

Hud Dixon returns to his hometown when his brother is killed by a lynch mob.

The Specialists

1969
Le Manège de Port-Barcarès
8.0

No description available.

Le Manège de Port-Barcarès

1972
Katmandu
4.9

A rebellious socially-conscious man travels to Nepal to find his dead-beat dad. There, he meets Jane, a beautiful hippie girl hooked on drugs. He's forced to steal artefacts for his father's slimy employer to earn money to help Jane.

Katmandu

1969
Diamond Rush
5.3

Traumatized by the War of Algeria and by the accidental death of his wife and his son, Manu left the right road. His last caper was the attack of the Antwerp-Tangiers Express, carrying a precious cargo of industrial diamonds. But the whole affair was bungled and all of his accomplices got shot. The only survivor of this disaster, Manu now finds refuge in the mountain house of Lucia, the widow of a smuggler who lives alone there with her little boy.

Diamond Rush

1969
Les Habitants des Flammes de Pierre
10.0

"Les Habitants des Flammes de Pierre" is the making-of documentary for the film "The Pillar of Solitude," which recounts Walter Bonatti's historic 1955 ascent of the southwest pillar of the Drus (the Bonatti Pillar) in the Mont Blanc massif, an 800-meter-high vertical face, climbed solo in six days, despite having only three. In the film, the renowned Swiss mountaineer Michel Vaucher portrays Bonatti. Unlike the film "The Pillar of Solitude," which was shot in black and white, the making-of documentary was filmed in color.

Les Habitants des Flammes de Pierre

1959
Éclipse 73
6.0

No description available.

Éclipse 73

1973
Terra Incognita
10.0

The Kerguelen Islands, nicknamed the "Islands of Desolation," are a French archipelago of subantarctic islands in the southernmost part of the Indian Ocean. They constitute one of the five districts of the French Southern and Antarctic Lands (TAAF). Uninhabited, the archipelago was discovered in the southern Indian Ocean on February 12, 1772, by the French navigator Yves Joseph de Kerguelen de Trémarec. This scientific film by Gilbert Dassonville, intended for the general public and for educational purposes, presents the scientific missions underway in 1963 on the Kerguelen Islands. The permanent station at Port-aux-Français, founded in 1950, the archipelago, and the surrounding wildlife are documented by following the multidisciplinary teams (biology, geophysics, geology, meteorology).

Terra Incognita

1963
Abîmes
10.0

Mountaineers Roberto Sorgato and Ignazio Piussi relive their 1961 adventure: the first winter ascent of the north face of Cima Ovest di Lavaredo, a formidable Dolomite wall reaching 2,973 meters. During this expedition, Sorgato accidentally fell 60 meters while the climbers were preparing their third bivouac and found himself suspended in mid-air by a rope. Through sheer perseverance, ingenuity, and courage, he managed to pull himself back to his partner. The film, shot eleven years later, is a reenactment with the protagonists playing themselves. The difficulties this climb presents, even for the most experienced climbers, are irrefutably highlighted. The film received the Genziana d'Oro award at the Trento Film Festival in 1973.

Abîmes

1972
Calanques
10.0

Two climbers, Dany Badier and Françoise Dassonville, swim to explore an underground cave in the Calanques, near Marseille, then equip themselves with climbing gear to scale the spectacular cliffs of the Calanques. Their ascent culminates at the summit of the Grande Candelle. Directed by Gilbert Dassonville in 1970 and produced by Cérès Films, this film won first prize at the Trento Mountain Film Festival in 1967.

Calanques

1967