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Terence Davies
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BIRTHDAY
November 10, 1945
Liverpool, England
RECENT CREDITS
Of Time and the City
(FILM)
Jan. 21, 2009
The House of Mirth
(FILM)
Dec. 22, 2000
The Neon Bible
(FILM)
Mar. 1, 1996
The Long Day Closes
(FILM)
May. 28, 1993
Distant Voices, Still Lives
(FILM)
Jul. 28, 1989
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Terence Davies Credits
BIOGRAPHY
British director and screenwriter Terence Davies is noted for his highly personal and often autobiographical chronicles of British working class and the struggles they face in the post-WWII world. He first gained....
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British director and screenwriter Terence Davies is noted for his highly personal and often autobiographical chronicles of British working class and the struggles they face in the post-WWII world. He first gained recognition for his Terence Davies Trilogy, which is comprised of three black-and-white religious-themed short chronicles of daily life. Davies shot the films sans color because he sees great beauty and power in the stark simplicity of black-and-white imagery. He released his first feature film, Distant Voices, Still Lives, in 1988. Filmed in color, it was a disturbing account of the brutal abuse he and other family members suffered at the hands of his working-class father during the 1950s. The film also makes a striking comparison between the shiny, upbeat veneer of the decade with its happily middle-class families and firm moral values and the dark, seething realities faced by the blue-collar laborers struggling to eke out a living in their shabby neighborhoods. The film earned the young director much acclaim on the international film festival circuit. Davies' next film, The Long Day Closes (1992), was also autobiographical, and earned him a similar amount of critical appreciation.
Davies stuck with his familiar theme of troubled family life in his next film, 1995's The Neon Bible. Transposing his familiar backdrop of England to the rural Georgia of the 1940s, Davies' display of universal despair kept in tune with the nostalgic and strikingly visual qualities of his previous efforts, though the methodical pacing polarized audiences and critics in their response to the film. It was with House of Mirth (2000) that Davies would break tradition, moving on to a full-blown, grand-scale period romance. Though it was by definition a larger film than his previous efforts, Mirth retained the more melancholy aspects that defined his previous works, with protagonist Lilly (X-Files star Gillian Anderson in a typecast-shattering role) searching for happiness through the courting of wealthy suitors, the characterizations and harsh realities faced by Lilly were essential Davies fodder. Lush and bursting from the seams with vivid color and gorgeous cinematography, Mirth delivered Edith Wharton's study of destructively materialistic social mores to the screen with unquestionable style.
~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
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Headlines
'Cast Away' Looks to be Christmas Survivor
Dec. 26, 2000
Moviegoers will "Cast" most of their box office votes for Tom Hanks this weekend. "Cast Away," 20th Century Fox's PG-13-rated drama reteaming Hanks and "Forrest Gump" director Robert Zemeckis, opens at nearly 2,800 theaters. "Sunday is going to be off because its Christmas Eve, but with Christmas on a Monday this year it's going to be a four-day weekend," an insider explains. "...
Read Story
NEWSMAKERS: Dude, Where's the Magic Wand?
Posted: Jan. 8, 2001
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Terence Davies Headlines
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Recently Worked With...
Gillian Anderson
The House of Mirth
Released: Dec. 22, 2000
Tom Turbiville
The Neon Bible
Released: Mar. 1, 1996
Brenda Peters
The Long Day Closes
Released: May. 28, 1993
Carl Chase
Distant Voices, Still Lives
Released: Jul. 28, 1989
Sherilyn Fenn
Ups & Downs
Released: Jan. 1, 1983
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