Film director Alain Resnais in 2012 at the 65th Cannes international film festival, in southern France. Photo: APFilm director Alain Resnais in 2012 at the 65th Cannes international film festival, in southern France. Photo: AP

The French film director Alain Resnais, known for classics such as Hiroshima, Mon Amour, Last Year at Marienbad and the documentary Night and Fog about Nazi concentration camps, died yesterday at the age of 91.

Resnais, who was born in 1922 in northwestern France and started his career with mid-length films in the 1940s, rose to fame with Night and Fog and Van Gogh, a short that won an Oscar in its category in 1950.

In 1959, with author Marguerite Duras as scriptwriter, he directed Hiroshima, Mon Amour, a feature about a love affair between a French woman and a Japanese architect that secured his reputation as a feature-film director.

French President Francois Hollande joined a chorus of condolences for Resnais, des­cribed as a highly original and influential film-maker steeped in the pre-war cinema culture of the United States.

“He constantly broke codes, rules and trends while appealing to a vast audience,” Hollande’s office said in a statement.

The director won a lifetime achievement award at the Cannes Film Festival in 2009, while the Berlin Film Festival awarded him the Alfred Bauer prize for his last film, Loving, Drinking and Eating, to be released in France this month.

He constantly broke codes, rules and trends

One of his favourite actors, Pierre Arditi, hailed the director as extremely original.

“There is nothing that less resembles a Resnais film than another Resnais film,”

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