movies
celebrities
tv
trailers
box office
photos
dvd
fans
Get Movie Showtimes
Select a Movie
Select a Movie
Now Playing
21 Jump Street
(R)
Amazing Spider-Man, The
(PG13)
Avengers, The
(PG13)
Battleship
(PG13)
Bernie
(PG13)
Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, The
(PG13)
Brave
(NR)
Brave
(NR)
Chernobyl Diaries
(R)
Dictator, The
(R)
Hunger Games, The
(PG13)
Lockout
(PG13)
Lucky One, The
(PG13)
Madagascar 3
(PG)
Madagascar 3
(PG)
Men in Black 3
(PG13)
Mirror Mirror
(PG)
Pirates! Band of Misfits
(PG)
Prometheus
(R)
Prometheus
(R)
Rock of Ages
(PG13)
Snow White and the Huntsman
(PG13)
That’s My Boy
(R)
Think Like a Man
(PG13)
What to Expect When You're Expecting
(PG13)
Go to
More Movies
OR
Find Theaters
Search
Sign up for our Newsletter
Fan Us
Follow Us
István Szabó
MAIN
PHOTOS
VIDEOS
NEWS
CREDITS
BIOGRAPHY
AWARDS
FANSITES
FORUM
BIRTHDAY
February 18, 1938
Budapest, Hungary
RECENT CREDITS
Shem
(FILM)
May. 26, 2006
Being Julia
(FILM)
Oct. 15, 2004
Taking Sides
(FILM)
Sep. 5, 2003
Ten Minutes Older: The Cello
(FILM)
Jan. 1, 2002
Sunshine
(FILM)
Jun. 9, 2000
View all
István Szabó Credits
BIOGRAPHY
One of the most prominent directors to emerge from the Hungarian New Cinema of the '60s, István Szabó has earned acclaim for films whose emotion, tenderness, and rage evoke stirring portraits of contemporary Hungarian....
Expand Full Bio
One of the most prominent directors to emerge from the Hungarian New Cinema of the '60s, István Szabó has earned acclaim for films whose emotion, tenderness, and rage evoke stirring portraits of contemporary Hungarian history, particularly the effects of World War II on Hungarian society.
Born February 18, 1938, in Budapest, Szabó studied film at the city's prestigious Academy of Film Art. The acclaim he earned for a film he made while a student, Koncert (1961), won Szabó a place at the Béla Bálazs film studio, where he netted further acclaim for two shorts he made in 1963, Variáciòk egy témára and Te. Szabó then moved on to his first feature-length venture, Almodozasok Kora (1964). The warmth and lyricism of the drama, which focused on the hopes and dreams of four recently graduated engineers, was particularly evident in Szabó's next effort, Apa (1967). The story of a young man struggling with the heroic imagery that he has built around his father, who was killed in World War II, it received wide critical acclaim. Along with its predecessor, Apa put Szabó at the forefront of a new generation of Hungarian filmmakers.
Szabó inaugurated the '70s with Szerelmesfilm, a love story that, along with the director's previous two films, comprised the last installment of a semi-autobiographical trilogy. He subsequently returned to an exploration of immediate post-war society with Budapesti Masek (1976), which focused on a group of displaced persons who take up residence in an abandoned streetcar while journeying to Budapest. It was Bizalom (1979), an improbable love story also set in the wartime milieu, that put Szabó on the international map, netting him a Silver Berlin Bear for direction and a Special Jury Prize for Best Film at the Berlin Film Festival.
The acclaim Szabó earned for Bizalom was amplified with his next feature, Mephisto (1981). The story of an ambitious actor who becomes caught up in a moral dilemma when he is befriended by a high-ranking Nazi official, it won a number of honors at Cannes and a Best Foreign Film Oscar. A complex exploration of the relationship between art and politics, it established Szabó as one of the most important directors of his era. He followed the film up with another celebrated work, Oberst Redl (1984). The story of the rise and fall of a colonel who faces blackmail because of his homosexuality, Redl received a Best Foreign Film BAFTA and an Oscar nomination in the same category.
Another Oscar nomination followed for Szabó's Hanussen (1988), a political drama set against the backdrop of the two world wars. Starring Klaus Maria Brandauer as an Austrian soldier who becomes clairvoyant after being shot in the head during World War I, the film marked Szabó's third collaboration with the actor, who had also starred in Mephisto and Oberst Redl.
Szabó's fairly sporadic work throughout the '90s was marked by two English language features, the first being Meeting Venus (1991). A romance set against a turbulent production of the opera Tannhaeuser, it starred Glenn Close as a celebrated Swedish opera singer. In 1999, Szabó helmed another English language film, Sunshine. An epic historical drama tracing the shifting fortunes of a family of Hungarian Jews over the course of almost 150 years, it featured Ralph Fiennes in three different roles and a strong supporting cast that included Rosemary Harris, James Frain, Miriam Margolyes, and William Hurt.
~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide
Collapse Full Bio
- Portions of Content Provided by
Rovi Data Solutions
© 2009 Rovi Data Solutions, Inc.
Sponsored Links
Buy A Link Here
Recently Worked With...
Ash Newman
Shem
Released: May. 26, 2006
Annette Bening
Being Julia
Released: Oct. 15, 2004
Harvey Keitel
Taking Sides
Released: Sep. 19, 2003
Amit Arroz
Ten Minutes Older: The Cello
Released: Jan. 1, 2002
Eszter Onodi
Sunshine
Released: Jun. 9, 2000
Buda Gulyas
Meeting Venus
Released: Nov. 15, 1991
Erland Josephson
Hanussen
Released: Mar. 10, 1989
Klaus Maria Brandauer
Colonel Redl
Released: Jan. 1, 1985
Andras Balint
The Father
Released: Oct. 4, 1967
Collapse
Expand to view more
Fan Sites
István Szabó Fansites
No fan sites available. Create the first!
Are you the #1 István Szabó Fan? Sign Up To Create A Website Here.
Go
Build a Fan Site
Sponsored Links
Buy A Link Here
Top 5 Celebrities
Naomi Watts
September 28, 1968
Shoreham, England
Chris Hemsworth
N/A
Megan Fox
May 16, 1986
Tennessee
Angelina Jolie
June 04, 1975
Los Angeles, CA
Scarlett Johansson
November 22, 1984
New York, NY
Go to
Top 100 Celebs