
Nguyễn Khánh Dư
Directing
Born 1933-09-02 · Cao Bằng, French Indochina [now Vietnam] · Died 2007-12-03
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.
Crew

Road Dust
Director

The Kids
Director
My Student is a Water God
Director
My Student is a Water God
Editor

No Horizon To Be Seen
Director

Sand Cactus
Director

Sand Cactus
Writer

Birds Return
Director

Skylark in the City
Director

Dã Tràng Reclaims The East Sea
Director

While Mother Is Away
Director

While Mother Is Away
Writer

The Foster Child
Director

The City at Sunrise
Script

The City at Sunrise
Director

The City at Sunrise
Cinematography

Two Mothers
Cinematography

The slope
Cinematography

Station
Cinematography

Sea Of Fire
Director of Photography