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Liviu Rebreanu (Romanian pronunciation: [ˈlivju reˈbre̯anu]; November 27, 1885 – September 1, 1944) was a Romanian novelist, playwright, short story writer, and journalist. Life [ edit ]
Răscoala is a 1965 Romanian drama film directed by Mircea Mureșan based on a novel by Liviu Rebreanu about the Romanian peasant uprising of 1907. Mureșan won the prize for Best First Work at the 1966 Cannes Film Festival. [1] It was the first Romanian film to be submitted to the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.
The film is an adaptation of Liviu Rebreanu's 1920 social novel Ion , starring Șerban Ionescu as the titular character, a poor Transylvanian peasant. The movie was mostly shot in the village of Fântânele, near Sibiu, from 5 April 1978 to 9 February 1979. The release was delayed due to concerns raised by the communist censors.
Forest of the Hanged (Romanian: Pădurea spânzuraților) is a novel by Romanian writer Liviu Rebreanu. Published in 1922, it is partly inspired by the experience of his brother Emil Rebreanu, an officer in the Austro-Hungarian Army hanged for espionage and desertion in 1917, during World War I. [1] The novel was made into a film in 1965. [2]
Forest of the Hanged (Romanian: Pădurea spânzuraților) is a 1965 Romanian drama film directed by Liviu Ciulei, and based on the eponymous novel by Liviu Rebreanu. Ciulei won the award for Best Director at the 1965 Cannes Film Festival. [1] Forest of the Hanged became the first Romanian film to achieve wide international recognition. [2]
Liviu Rebreanu Lucian Blaga. Traditional society and recent political events influenced works such as Liviu Rebreanu's Răscoala ("The Uprising", 1932), which was inspired by the 1907 Romanian Peasants' Revolt, and Pădurea Spânzuraților ("Forest of the Hanged"), published in 1922 and inspired by Romanian participation in World War I.
According to Breban, the Rebreanu monograph is a work "unique in our literature", which already displays Raicu's contempt for officialdom. [3] Among Raicu's generation colleagues, Manolescu spoke of his practicing a "democracy of literature" and "cult of nuances", reminiscent of Tudor Vianu 's earlier essays. [ 61 ]
Ion Marin Sadoveanu (1893–1964) Eugeniu Botez (1877–1933) Eugen Lovinescu (1881–1943) Cezar Petrescu (1892–1961) Liviu Rebreanu (1885–1944) Mihail Sadoveanu (1889–1961) Vasile Voiculescu (1884–1963) George Călinescu (1899–1965) Zaharia Stancu (1902–1974)