Dominique Benicheti

Dominique Benichetti
Born 1943
Paris, France
Died 2011
Occupation Film Director, Screenwriter, Film Producer, Animator, Technician, Stereographer,

Dominique Benichetti was a French film director and producer known for documentaries, pioneering work on 3D film, animation, and special projects.

Early life

Dominique was born in Paris in 1943. He studied at the National School for Applied Arts, the National Superior School of Fine Arts, and the Institute for Advanced Cinematographic Studies (IDHEC) in Animation.

Career

Over the course of his professional life, Benichetti directed and produced more than 30 films. He worked on documentaries, educational, scientific, institutional, and corporate films. He was active in animation, and was a creative and technical consultant on many 3D and large format (70mm) film projects. He advised on 3D technology for The Futuroscope Park in Poitiers, France.

Benichetti was also active in the United States, teaching documentary filmmaking at Harvard University, as well as working at the Jefferson Laboratories of Experimental Physics, and the Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. In Hollywood, he worked at Gower Studios as a consultant stereographer.

Cousin Jules

Benichetti's documentary "Le Cousin Jules" was produced over the course of 5 years (from April 1968 to March 1973). The film shows the everyday life of Benichetti's cousin Jules Guiteaux and his wife Félicie as they work on their farm in the French countryside. The film (unseen for several decades) was considered a masterpiece when released, showing at a number of festivals and winning awards. It was noted for the Cinemascope work of cinematographer Pierre-William Glen and its stereophonic sound. This long metrage obtained the Jury Prize at the Locarno Festival in 1973.

As of 2012, "Le Cousin Jules" has been restored and is once again being shown in film festivals.[1] [2]

Few of successes movies

L’Odyssée magique / The Magical Odyssey : the much acclaimed 70 mm/ 8 film completed in March 2009 for Giscard d'Estaing's Vulcania Edutainement Park in Auvergne, Benichetti was chosen over stiff competition - including such high level cotenders as Earth photographer Yan-Arthus Bertrand - to realize this fanciful fairy tale documentary of a hymn to Nature which was filmed in 70mm/8perfs in Iceland, Colorado, French Guiana, Grand Canyon, California Viet Nam and France. In this production, he directed as well the part of Titania, a charming cartoon fairy character, made with computer graphics animation, and blended in the live action of the movie. [3] [4]

La Revole : a delightful 20 minute 3-D musical comedy, is the high point of the Beaujolais Wine Museum, applauded by approximately 150,000 visitors a year. He wrote the screenplay and the lyrics, drew the storyboard, and directed the movie while keeping both eyes on the stereography ![5]

Le Prix de la Liberté / The Price of Freedom : a 20 mn film in 35 mm and 360 degrees, created for the Museum in Arromanches to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Normandy Landings in 1944. He wrote and directed the film, blending in a circular continuum the shots filmed by war correspondents with staged sequences of contemporary Normandy. It has been viewed by over 2 million spectators, and is still running in the circular theater specially built for the film, overlooking the bay of Arromanches. [6]

Family name

Since 2005, Benicheti is also written Benichetti with two "T".

See also

63rd Berlin International Film Festival

Vulcania

References

  1. "THE CINEMA GUILD TO RELEASE RESTORATION OF DOMINIQUE BENICHETI'S LOST 1973 FILM 'COUSIN JULES'". The Association of Moving Picture Archivists. Retrieved November 4, 2013.
  2. "BERLINALE FESTIVAL Le Cousin Jules". KBB. Retrieved February 8, 2013.
  3. "Vulcania 2009 : de nouvelles attractions pour le parc !". maville Clermont-Ferrand. Retrieved March 16, 2009.
  4. "The Magical Odyssey, the Child and the Earth". IMDb. Retrieved 2009.
  5. fr:Cinéma en relief
  6. "En route pour 4 millions de visiteurs !". La Manche Libre. Retrieved September 1, 2008.

External links

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