Biography
Czech-born Karel Reisz was 12 when his father, a Jewish lawyer, felt it expedient to bundle his son to England before Hitler entrenched himself in the Sudetenland. Sadly, Reisz ended up the only member of his family to survive the Holocaust. Educated at the Quaker's Leighton Park School, Reisz served with the RAF, then became a chemistry student at Cambridge. After two years as a teacher in the London school system, Reisz began writing film criticism for such specialized magazines as Sight and Sound. With fellow future director
Lindsay Anderson, Reisz founded the influential film periodical Sequence. After the publication of his book The Technique of Film Editing (a remarkably incisive effort, considering that he'd never set foot on a movie soundstage), Reisz was a firmly established leader of Britain's Free Cinema movement; he got a chance to put his theories in practice when he and
Tony Richardson co-directed the influential "night life" documentary
Momma Don't Allow (1955). He turned to non-documentary filmmaking with his first solo feature,
Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1960), essentially an outgrowth of the disenfranchised-youth theme he'd previously explored in
Momma Don't Allow. Most of his later films were celebrations of eccentric individualism, such as Morgan! (1966),
Isadora (1968), and
The Gambler (1974). In 1981, Reisz, together with scenarist
Harold Pinter, met and mastered the challenge of translating John Fowles' complex novel The French Lieutenant's Woman to the screen. Twice married, Karel Reisz's second wife was actress
Betsy Blair, best known for her portrayal of the "dog" heroine in
Marty (1955). ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide