José María Berzosa Explained

José María Berzosa
Birthname:José María Berzosa
Birth Date:15 August 1928
Birth Place:Albacete, Spain
Death Place:Paris, France
Nationality:Spanish/French
Alma Mater:Institut des hautes études cinématographiques
Occupation:Film director, screenwriter, author
Years Active:1959–2001

José Maria Berzosa (15 August 1928 – 2 January 2018) was a Spanish television director who lived the most part of his life auto–exiled in France.

His documentaries are characterized by having the humor of Luis Buñuel and the erudition of Jorge Luis Borges. His work details objectivity ideas in favor of staging (even when he films «the real» and claims creative subjectivity).

One of his most important productions was «Chile Impresiones» (1976), a documentary for French television whose purpose was to discredit the international image of Augusto Pinochet dictatorship, the de facto administration that denied violation of human rights in the name of order and depoliticization. The novelty of said filming consists in having denounced the situation under a methodology that mixed mockery with intimate daily life, that is, through (that the three generals, except for Gustavo Leigh partially, did not know how to answer) made by Berzosa based on ontological themes like philosophy and aesthetics about happiness, ethics or art. Chilean Military Junta generals would only discovered Berzosa's attack once the documentary was published.

Biography

Born in Albacete, he was a film critic during his youth in Spain. However, in 1956, he decided to leave the Iberian country for political reasons that involved clash of francoism censorship towards his potential professional development.

He died on 2 January 2018 aged 89.[1]

Works

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Muere en Francia, donde hizo carrera, el director español José María Berzosa. La Vanguardia. 6 January 2018. 28 December 2020. es.