Awards:
The Martin Scorsese
Film Post Award, Winner
(1996)
The Warner Bros. Pictures
Film Award, Winner (1996)
The 23rd Academy Awards,
Official Entry (1996)
The Chicago International
Children's Film Festival,
Finalist (1996)
The Wasserman Film Award,
Winner Best Cinematography
(1996)
The TASH Film Award, Nominated
(1997)
Recent
DVD Reviews
from
Amazon.com Editorial:
"Writer/
Director Alexandre
Ginnsz was a 19-year-old
senior student at
the New York University
Film
School when he wrote
Duo, his first film.
Duo is the moving
story of a boy in
love with a violinist
who sets out to become
her accompanist.
To lead his film,
Alexandre chose a
12-year-old boy with
Down syndrome,
his brother Stephane,
who in 1995 became
the first actor with
Down syndrome
to ever star in a
movie.
Stephane rises to
the occasion delivering
an astonishing performance
cheered by film
audiences worldwide,
and showing everyone
that "special"
people can be gifted
too! Co-starring
as the violinist
is 12-year-old Eden
Riegel,
two-time Emmy Award
nominee and now the
star of the popular
TV show "All
My Children".
The chemistry between
Stephane and Eden
is pure movie
magic. Duo is an
ode to love, innocence,
and beauty. It is
a treat to your eyes,
ears, and soul, a
rare gem that will
stay in your heart
forever. It was an
official entry at
the 1996 Film
Academy Awards (Student
Category), finalist
at the 1996 Chicago
International Children's
film
Festival, winner
of the 1996 Martin
Scorsese Post Production
Film
Award, winner of
the 1996 Warner Bros
Pictures Film
Production Award
and winner of the
1996 Wasserman Film
Award for Best Cinematography.
Alexandre was also
nominated in 1997
for the TASH Film
Award, "for
best promoting the
inclusion of people
with severe disabilities
in all aspects of
community life and
reaching a national
audience". The
movie
Duo is now available
on DVD
(
DVD pal, DVD ntsc,
DVD secam) &
Video in
limited edition.
The DVD
features Dolby Digital
5.1 Surround sound,
French and Spanish
subtitles, bonus
video
footage, extra features,
and information for
people with Down
syndrome who want
to get involved in
film
and the arts."
Viewers' Reviews:
"Experience
of a Life Time"
October
24, 2004
by Chris
T.
"This is one
of the most moving films
I have ever seen. Stephane
Ginnsz (who has Down syndrome)
gives a tour de force
of a performance, that
shifts you from tears
to joy and back again.
Eden Riegel also gives
a stunningly beautiful
performance. Both did
above and beyond in their
roles. The direction is
also dead on, along with
the script. This film
is an experience of a
life time."
"Beautiful
Movie!"
October 16, 2004
by natashka "Natasha"
(USA)
"This film
was a real treat! The
two young actors, Stephan
Ginnsz and Eden Riegel,
are amazing. I was especially
impressed by Stephan,
a 12-year-old actor who
has Down syndrome. He
gives one of the most
subtle, yet powerful performances
I have ever seen on screen.
The story is really beautiful
too, sometimes funny,
sometimes deep, always
unpredictable, and definitely
unforgettable!"
"Great
DVD!"
December 15, 2004
by ? (USA)
"Great DVD!"
FRANCE
Magazine Article
(1997)
by Aryelle MONANGE
"Alexandre Ginnsz
has written, produced,
directed and edited Duo,
a film
twice awarded in the United
States and whose first
role is held by his little
brother who has Down
syndrome. Expatriate
for ten years in Washington,
DC and New York, this
young Frenchman just presented
his film
at the Maison Francaise.
The movie
theater was packed. His
adventure is altogether
an example of family solidarity,
where each one gives his
best to help Duo penetrate
the closed world of movies.
A beautiful story.
In the Ginnsz family,
there is the big brother,
Alexandre, 22-years-old
hardly and already movie
director, screenwriter,
film
editor, film
and video
producer and film
score composer. There
is also his 13-year-old
little brother with Down
syndrome, Stephane, proud
to have become become
actor
for Alexandre. Between
the two, an amazing complicity
and much, much love. The
father works at the World
Bank, descendant of a
long line of engineers
and engineer himself.
The artistic dimension
of the boys undoubtedly
comes from the mother,
Irene, cordial and passionate,
a long time violin soloist
at the National Orchestre
de Paris who just got
back to work (with joy).
it is also to help out
her son Alexandre. One
could add the grand-father,
now also movie
producer to help out...
you know the rest. In
the heart of this family,
there is a movie,
Duo: 30 minutes of tenderness,
emotions, glances and
notes of music. It's too
short. We are asking for
more. Shot in 16 mm film,
with its freshness often
seeked by the best movie
directors. This film
points the finger at what
bothers us and what we
try to ignore.
Stephane Ginnsz plays
the lead role, a student
in a special education
class of kids with Down
syndrome, who falls in
love with Joan (played
by Eden Riegel), a young
violonist (disconcerting
of beauty and grace) Her
voice is as fragile as
the notes of music which
vibrate on the cords of
her violin. Joan has this
in common with Stephane:
loneliness, being different,
more sensitive, a dreamer,
more timid. She is also
lost in her own world,
on the other side of the
mirror. To be able to
communicate, He draws
a picture for her, in
exchange she teaches him
three small notes from
music. And Stephane starts
to dream: one day he will
be jer accompanist. When
Alexandre Ginnsz imagine
the script of his movie,
he was not even 20 yet.
In third year of film
school at New York University,
his these was to be no
longer than 15 minutes.
Alexandre decided to make
it a little longer (which
will cost him to be disqualified
from the school festival):
his close relatives are
ready to help him. The
story is actually like
the story of his family.
"I remember Stephane.
my little brother very
alone", remembers
Alexandre.
As
for Stephane, the little
brother with Down syndrome,
he trained for a long
time before the shoot.
"At the beginning,
I simply wanted to know
if he could follow the
directives. Progressively,
I pushed him to see if
he could do more, and
that was often the case...
", explains Alexandre,
obviously in admiration.
The result is striking
with accuracy and reserve:
Stephane can move us,
but he can also make us
laugh.
The work in this film
is colossal. The family
has to scrape the drawers
to finance it (with the
help of several grants).
More than 300 young actresses
auditioned for the role
of Joan. The film
shoot, which took 10 working
days, 20 hours daily,
took place in part in
the family house in Washington,
for economical reasons.
Certain scenes in the
movie
were shot at the french
international high school
in Bethesda, at Tilden
Middle school and even
at the French Embass,
in the main movie
theater.
Duo received the Martin
Scorcese Film
Award and Warner Brothers
Pictures Film
Production Award... Not
frequent for a young French
film
maker in the United States.
Success however did not
go to Alexandre Ginnsz's
head. He is one of those
whose reserve and modesty
make sympathetic and moving.
Gently, without haste,
he is tracing his road.
The screenplay
of his next movie
is already written. In
one month, encouraged
by true successes, he
will be flying towards
Los Angeles to edit another
movie, with
his script
under the arm of course.
This is how all the great
film
makers started... "

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