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  1. Nana is a 1926 French silent drama film directed by Jean Renoir and starring Catherine Hessling, Werner Krauss and Jean Angelo. It was Renoir's second full-length film and is based on the 1880 novel by Émile Zola. It was shot at the Bavaria Studios in Munich and the Neuilly Studios in Paris.

  2. Sinopse. O filme mudo conta a história de Nana (Catherine Hessling), uma estrela de teatro, que atua em peças leves, vistas sobretudo pelos burgueses parisienses durante o Segundo Império, na...

    • Jean Renoir
    • Jean Renoir, Pierre Lestringuez
    • 150
    • 1926
  3. An Unsung Masterpiece Rediscovered: Viewing Notes. Adapted from Émile Zola's novel, this definitive movie version of Nana [Jean Renoir, 1926] is a masterpiece, the longest Renoir film, and restores one of the master's earliest successes to a length of 2 hours 49 minutes.

    • (747)
    • Les Films Jean Renoir
    • Jean Renoir
  4. J ean Renoir's second full-length film is this lavish and fairly faithful adaptation of Emile Zola's classic novel, Nana. The film's extravagances include spacious, overly decorated sets and two magnificent set pieces - a horse race and an open air ball (complete with a stunningly choreographed cancan sequence).

    • Jean Renoir
  5. Jacoby & Co. (Germany) Starring: Catherine Hessling, Werner Kraus, Jean Angelo, Pierre Lestringuez, Jacqueline Forzane. Release: 4/1926 Duration: 150'. Paris at the end of the Second Empire: Nana, the star of the Théâtre des Variétés thanks to her looks rather than her talent, is determined to succeed socially.

  6. 16 de abr. de 2007 · April 16, 2007. Share. The reputation of Jean Renoir son of impressionist master Pierre Auguste Renoir, cinematic father of the French New Wave, and arguably the greatest French director of all time threatens to overshadow the rich, lively, joyfully alive films of his vast career.

  7. Synopsis by Hal Erickson. Jean Renoir's second film was this lavishly appointed adaptation of Emile Zola's novel Nana. Renoir does an admirable job retelling Zola's woeful tale of a covetous Parisian slum girl in purely visual terms. Hoping to escape her tawdry surroundings, Nana has an affair with high-ranking government official George Muffat.