Émile_Couzinet

Émile Couzinet

Émile Couzinet

French film producer and film director


Émile Cousinet, (12 November 1896 24 October 1964) was a French film producer and film director.

Quick Facts Born, Died ...

Biography

The son of a carpenter, Couzinet became a traveling projectionist and then director of the Royan Casino.

In the 1920s, he decided to invest in the exploitation [fr] of movie theatres, including those of art et essai [fr]. In 1930, due to the unbridled competition of the barriers of Bordeaux, he acquired his own studios, the "Studios de la Côte de Beauté", a cinema complex installed in the seaside resort of Royan. After the destruction of the city at the end of World War II, he recreated his studios in Bordeaux, which then took the name Studios de la Côte d'Argent. The infrastructures were developed near the castle Tauzin which became its main residence[1]

He produced himself vaudevilles, of which he was also the screenwriter (occasionally under the name of Robert Eyquem) sometimes at the first degree or a little grivois, often adapted from boulevard theatre. Thus, Trois jours de bringue à Paris [fr] is an adaptation of La Cagnotte [fr] by Eugène Labiche whereas Le Don d'Adèle [fr] is drawn from a play by Pierre Barillet and Jean-Pierre Gredy.

As a representative pillar of popular cinema, he produced jubilant films including Le Club des fadas [fr], Trois Vieilles Filles en folie [fr], The Cucuroux Family, Le Congrès des belles-mères [fr], and also Mon curé champion du régiment [fr]. If comedy was his favorite field, Couzinet also touched on other genres such as swashbuckler films (Buridan, héros de la Tour de Nesle [fr]), literary adaptation (Colomba after Prosper Mérimée) or family melodrama (Quai des illusions [fr], a film for which he employed a certain Sergio Leone as an assistant.

He made famous cinema names such as Pierre Larquey, Jeanne Fusier-Gir and Gaby Morlay play in his films. But he also helped the beginnings of truculent actors such as Jean Carmet, who appeared in Mon curé champion du régiment and Robert Lamoureux, who held his own role in Le Don d'Adèle.

The Couzinet empire gradually disappeared from the late 1950s in the context of concentration of the film industry.

Filmography

Bibliography

  • Mamolar, Françoise (June 2008). Citizen Couzinet, Hollywood-sur-Gironde (in French). Vaux-sur-Mer: Éditions Bonne-Anse. p. 120. ISBN 978-2-916470-03-0.

References


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