Ernest Genval(1884-1945)
- Director
During the first World War, Ernest Genval became a singer in the
Belgian army, and after the conflict he went on a successful cabaret
tour of the Belgian Congo. Upon his return to Belgium in 1924, he tried
to earn a living by producing advertising films. He also shot a (lost)
feature film about the life in rural Belgium, The Becasse farm, on
which he collaborated with Victor Morin, an experienced cameraman who
had previously worked together with Jacques Feyder. In the meantime he
discovered that Belgians were as avid for information about the Belgian
Congo and the mandated territories in Central Africa as they were
ignorant about the real situation. He therefore decided to make good
use of his experience and contacts and return to the colony with his
cameraman and equipment. Touring the country by car, Genval succeeded
in making a dozen of short films commissioned by, or dealing with,
colonial enterprises. In 1927 he made the long documentary 'The Congo
Awakens', which has premièred in Brussels in May of that same year
before going officially released by the major international distributor
Gaumont-Metro-Goldwyn in the autumn. The film was a pean to Belgium's
civilization, techno-industrial and medical achievements in the colony.
After this financial success, Genval returned to Africa several times
to make films and ethnographical documentaries. In Belgium he continued
to direct a number of advertising films. In 1945, however, he was
arrested by the Gestapo on the charge of collaboration with the
underground press and deported to Dachau, where he eventually succumbed
to typhoid fever.