Jean Dréville was a prolific French film director whose career spanned from the late 1920s to the late 1960s. Initially trained in advertising design and photography, he began his cinematic journey by publishing articles in film sections of newspapers like L'Intransigeant and Comœdia. Dréville directed his first film, Autour de L'Argent (1928), a documentary on the making of Marcel L'Herbier's L'Argent. His notable works include A Cage of Nightingales (1945), which inspired the 2004 film The Chorus, and The Battle of the Rails (1946), a realistic portrayal of French railway workers' resistance during World War II. Dréville's films are recognized for their narrative clarity and humanistic approach.
Directing
57
Male
1906-09-20
Vitry-sur-Seine, Val-de-Marne, France
Jean Dreville
Jean Dréville, l'aimant du cinéma
Intermediate Landing in Paris
The Suspects
Cinématon XVI
1940: Taking over French Cinema
Return to Life
Carbon Copy
Lafayette
Queen Margot
Nights of Farewell
Autour de l'argent
Tainted
Creosote
The Chess Player
Das Geheimnis vom Bergsee
A Dog, A Mouse and a Sputnik
A Cage of Nightingales
Endless Horizons
Normandy - Neman
Hanged Man's Farm
The Seven Deadly Sins
White Nights in Saint Petersburg
Business Is Business
The Spice of Life
Operation Swallow: The Battle for Heavy Water
Mama Hummingbird
Les Cadets de l'océan
The Roquevillards
The Girl with the Whip
The Sleeping Sentinel
Physiopolis
President Haudecoeur
Les Petites Alliées
His Uncle from Normandy
Troïka sur la piste blanche
Touche-à-tout
A Man and His Woman
Coup de vent
Trois pour cent
Candy Apple
Annette and the Blonde Woman
Tornavara
The Lady and the Gipsy
The Big Meeting