Top 10 similar words or synonyms for dubreuil

faivre    0.826297

brunet    0.825430

thibault    0.821486

descamps    0.820874

evrard    0.819725

grondin    0.817371

lafont    0.814950

billaud    0.812384

bonnefoy    0.812354

gendron    0.811829

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for dubreuil

Article Example
Charlotte Dubreuil Charlotte Dubreuil (born 1940) is a French filmmaker and novelist. After two small acting roles, Dubreuil turned her attention to writing and directing. She has written and directed several French films as well as produced two novels.
Charlotte Dubreuil Her first solo screenwriting project was "Qu'est-ce que tu veux Julie?" (1976) which she also directed. The film was presented at the Festival du Film de Paris in 1976 and received good reviews. She followed that with "Des enfants gâtés" (1976) co-written with Bertrand Tavernier. In 1979, she wrote and directed two films: "La Peine perdue ou le présent composé" and "Ma Chérie". In "Ma Chérie", Dubreuil was working again with Édouard Luntz and co-wrote the film with him, which she directed. The film is a feminist view of a mother-daughter relationship.
Charlotte Dubreuil In 1985, she directed "La cote d'amour", written by Michel Contat and Ennio De Concini and starring Mario Adorf, Danièle Delorme, Geneviève Fontanel, Françoise Prévost. In 1994, she directed "Elles ne pensent qu'à ça" written by Georges Wolinski and starring Roland Blanche, Claudia Cardinale, Carole Laure, and Bernard Le Coq.
Pierre Dubreuil Dubreuil's recognition first came in 1896, when his "Sombre Clarté" ("Dark Clarity") was shown in Brussels. Subsequently, Dubreuil exhibited five prints at the Photo-Club de Paris, and by the turn of the century was internationally acclaimed, even upstaging Constant Puyo and Robert Demachy, the major figures of the Photo-Club de Paris. By the turn of the century, 39 of Dubreuil's works were featured in "Annuaire General et International de la Photographie," and German critic Fritz Loescher praised Dubreuil in "Photographische Mitteilungen." Few of Dubreuil's works from this period survived; they may have been destroyed by the photographer himself, or destroyed in bombings during the Second World War.
Pierre Dubreuil French newspaper Le Figaro hailed the 1987 exhibition as "the dazzling revelation of an unknown talent," noting "a vision which is much more exciting than so many of the glories that encumber the histories of photography." The article commended Jacobson for having "discovered this treasure which was believed to have been lost."