Robert Nador Movies

A feature-film and television producer who gained fame for his role in the development of the Inspector Maigret TV franchise, Robert Nador was also the founder of Dune Productions.
Beginning his career as a second assistant director on the Maurice Dugowson comedy Lily, Aime-moi, Nador would fall into a successful role as a producer with the Maigret series and participated in the creation of TV France International in 1994.
On October 8, 2001, Robert Nador died of a heart attack in Paris. He was 51. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
2000  
 
Noted indie filmmaker Beth B. directs this documentary about three Vietnam veterans travelling back to Indochina and confronting their pasts. With their grown family in tow, the three revisit cities, temples, villages, and jungle trails, an experience that proves to be difficult, though revelatory. Through one-on-one interviews, the veterans' children relate their resentment toward the war and the trauma that it inevitably wrought. This film was screened at the 2000 Rotterdam Film Festival. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide

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1997  
 
A dark and claustrophobic film, this brutal, tragic, gut-wrenching drama is set almost totally within the confines of a ship's cargo container that is only 25 square meters in size. It is the grim story of six ill-fated refugees trying to get to Canada from a port in France. The police are in hot pursuit when the septet of strangers are stowed away in the huge metal box. The refugees -- two men, two women and two children -- are of various backgrounds including Gypsy, Russian and Arab. The first of many problems occurs when a mother and daughter arrive with no food (they lost it during a chase). The one Russian refugee, Roman, declares that they should not be allowed to board the ship, but the other three refugees allow them in. Their ordeal begins when the ship breaks down in Liverpool. The layover is hard on the hidden party's food supply. Another breakdown at sea is disastrous, for everyone inside runs out of food and water. Their hunger, thirst and fear causes chaos amongst them, and violence erupts at different points. Finally they become so desperate that they decide they must escape the container or die. Unfortunately, if they succeed, a worse fate may await them on deck, for the ship's crew knows that their employer will face a $5,000 per head fine levied by the Canadian government for any illegal alien that is discovered on board their vessel. As a result, the crewmen have no qualms about doing whatever they want with their unwanted cargo. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Ovidiu BalanMoussa Maaskri, (more)
1997  
 
A businessman's day starts out badly and turns into a surrealistic nightmare. Forman is trapped in a traffic jam in the pouring rain when he realizes that he has forgotten to buy a gift for his 10th anniversary. Something goes wrong with his car and he ends up taking shelter in the entrance of a ritzy, art-deco style mall. Just then, a man who closely resembles him bursts out of the door and is killed by a passing car. A little girl appears and lures Forman into the mall. He soon finds himself a prisoner in an increasingly strange place populated by sinister and frightening people. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide

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1996  
 
New Orleans was once described as "the city that care forgot," and at no time does the city set its troubles aside as fully as during the raucous celebration of Mardi Gras. Cutting Loose takes a new look at this venerable Louisiana tradition, from the city's beautiful official parades and festivities to the wilder (but less public) events elsewhere in town and the elaborate parties thrown by the city's wealthy "krewes" (private social clubs). Cutting Loose received the Filmmaker's Trophy for Best Documentary at the 1996 Sundance Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

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1981  
 
In 1979, French director Francois Reichenbach was in Houston to film a documentary on crime in the city when a policeman was murdered in a shootout and Reichenbach dropped his original documentary plan to follow the murder case instead. The killer, Charlie Bass, got away to his grandmother's house in Tennesee, and once he was captured there, Reichenbach came in to start filming the circumstances of his arrest and eventual extradition. Bass was brought to trial in Texas and sentenced to death. During the events leading up to the trial and its aftermath, Reichenbach interviewed Bass himself and others connected with the case, deciding to omit editorial comments on the interviews. That may have been a mistake, since his subjects are not able to sustain much interest on their own. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, All Movie Guide

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1979  
NR  
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Joseph Losey's 1979 film adaptation of the Mozart opera Don Giovanni adheres faithfully to the original Lorenzo Da Ponte libretto, with rakish Don Giovanni (Ruggero Raimondi) putting the make on the aristocratic Dona Anna (Edda Moser). Giovanni's enemies warn him that he'll suffer mightily for his amorous escapades. And when the gates of hell open up on cue in the last act, and Don Giovanni is dragged screaming into perdition, it turns out those enemies were right. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Starring:
Ruggero RaimondiKiri Te Kanawa, (more)

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