mdblist.com logo The Best Dominique Dubosc Directed Movies


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Kanopy
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10
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Jean Rouch: First Film 1947-1991 (1991)
The first film in Jean Rouch's filmography is not his first film at all. It was edited by a French news company, using images he had shot but organised into a very different sequence from his own. On top of that, it was accompanied by a colonialist commentary said by a sports reporter! As we watch, Jean Rouch ad-libs a new commentary more in keeping with his images, and so, in 1991, he finally finishes his first film! - Dominique Dubosc
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7.2
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Paraguay Remembered (2017)
Veteran French doc director Dominique Dubosc revisits the South American country where he taught ethnology, made his first films and got a taste of life under a military dictatorship.
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10
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Dossier Peñarroya : les deux visages du trust (1972)
This film, commissioned by the Penarroya workers on the eve of their strike in February 1972, presents their demands against the powerful LE NICKEL-PENARROYA-MOKTA trust, which constitutes the majority of the industrial activities of the Rothschild group.
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10
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Manojhara (1969)
MANOJHARA portrays – in their own words – the experiences of the residents of Paraguay’s Santa Isabel leper colony. They narrate images of life in the colony with statements about moving from the periphery of the colony, where the healthier patients stay, to the center, where the dying patients are, as well as anticipation of a celebration and not wanting to feel ill and outcast.
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6.1
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73
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Palestine, Palestine (2002)
In a country that has been occupied for decades, a couple of puppeteers continue to bring a little joy from village to village. The children laugh, perhaps still unaware of the gravity of the situation. The central section is devoted to a visit to the refugee camp of Dheisheh.
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The Sleep of Reason (2024)
As its title suggests, The Sleep of Reason is a film about human madness. The reference to Goya is assumed, but only halfway or in half-tone: we don't see the monsters. The emphasis is on what precedes it: sleep, not the absolute nightmare it produces. The film is very simply a series of tableaux and little tales in the style of Kafka: ordinary stories in the ordinary world of colonization and madness. Beyond a short introduction, I've tried to say nothing. The three-line texts that come before each painting are like chapter headings in the novels of yesteryear: where we shall see - where we shall see that... We only see it in the body of each chapter, i.e. in the pictures.
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If I Must Die (2023)
Gaza December 7, 2023 - “As a hand rises on the brink of death and shipwreck…”, poet Reefat Alareer appeals one last time to love.
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The Never Ending Wall (2008)
You don't need to look all the way to the end: there isn't one.
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Palestinian Stories (2008)
These ten stories (dreams, urban legends, letters from prison, testimonies…) were filmed in Palestine from 2001 to 2008
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LIP or A taste for collective action (1976)
The mythical 1973-1974 strike at the LIP watch factory in Besançon (France), was one of the largest social struggles of the second half of the 20th century in Europe, due to the importance of the economic and political questions it raised, as well as its forms of organization, and its scope and popularity. This film, edited under the control of the workers, relates their fight from the inside. More information on www.dominiquedubosc.com/en/lip-ou-le-gout-du-collectif-en/
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Célébrations (2000)
From January 16 to February 28, 1991, I experienced the Gulf War like an endless nightmare. I only left it when I arrived in New York where I was to meet the poet and filmmaker Jonas Mekas. Instead of making a film about Mekas, I only celebrated this newfound life, as if it were the only response I could make to the war.
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A Filmmaker’s Notebook in the Occupied Territories (2024)
This hour-and-ten-minute film brings together ten short stories and eighteen sketches filmed in the Occupied Territories during the Second Intifada.
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Palestine in Fragments (2007)
The film assembles a series of chapters which move between impressionistic studies of unusual spaces and structures observed in the occupied Palestinian territories.
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Visiting Jonas Mekas (1992)
In a mimetic approach to that of the great documentarian, Dubosc delivers notes and fragments of their meetings between 1991 and 1992 in New York. In his apartment, Mekas lends himself, with poetry, to the game of the filmer-filmed. Numerous excerpts from his films are inserted into the montage.
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Palestine Remembered (2004)
In July 2002, the illustrator Daniel Maja is invited to Ramallah and Gaza to develop a project for art schools in Palestine, despite the fact that most West Bank cities are under curfew at the time. Dominique Dubosc, the filmmaker, decides to accompany him. The film develops according to their two gazes, which play one against the other, or with the other, in two mediums, throughout the journey.


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