Nguyễn Khánh Dư

Birthday: 1933-09-02
Deathday: 2007-12-03
Birthplace: Cao Bằng, French Indochina [now Vietnam]
Gender: Male

Nguyễn Khánh Dư (September 2, 1933 – December 3, 2007) was a Vietnamese director and cinematographer. A war photographer for an information bureau during the 1st Indochina War, he began working as a documentary cinematographer in 1955. In 1959, he joined Vietnam Feature Film Studio and had his first feature film credit in Phạm Văn Khoa’s “Vườn cam”[Orange Garden] (1960).

Despite lacking in professional training, Khánh Dư was widely regarded as one of the most influential cinematographers in early Vietnamese cinema. He worked on films such as "Chị Tư Hậu" [Mrs. Tu Hau] (1962) and "Biển lửa" [Sea of Fire] (1965) by Phạm Kỳ Nam, and won Best Cinematography at the 4th Vietnam Film Festival for his work in the feature film "Hai người mẹ" [Two Mothers] (1975) as well as the documentary "Thành phố lúc rạng đông" [The City at Sunrise] (1975).

He began directing in 1976. His best known film is perhaps "Mẹ vắng nhà" [While Mother is Away] (1980), and many of his films focus on children as their subject.

Credits

Year Title
1992-10-27 Road Dust
1991-01-01 The Kids
1990-01-01 My Student is a Water God
1986-01-01 No Horizon To Be Seen
1985-01-02 Sand Cactus
1984-01-01 Birds Return
1983-10-27 Skylark in the City
1982-01-02 Dã Tràng Reclaims The East Sea
1980-04-01 While Mother Is Away
1977-01-01 The Foster Child
1975-12-31 The City at Sunrise