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This article was automatically assessed because at least one article was rated and this bot brought all the other ratings up to at least that level. BetacommandBot08:16, 27 August 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I just read through this, and pretty much everything seems like it was translated from French through Google Translator directly. Not only that, but it doesn't have any sources attached to the quotes it appears to have in these section. If nobody replied in a few days with a way to make it more coherent, I'll remove the content but keep it on a subpage or something so that it can be adjusted and placed into the article if it's deemed necessary. As it is, the content doesn't seem to make sense to someone with an understanding of English. Comics (talk) 03:43, 5 August 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Points that really stand out:
Birth of Tony Gatlif (real name Michel Dahmani), a September 10, 1948 in the Algiers suburb of a family of Andalusian gypsies. He discovered the theater during these passages too short to school because he spends most of his time in the streets. He is illiterate and apprentice thug but the memories of cinema never left.
1966, one evening he decided to visit his idol, Michael Simon, who played in a room of Rene Obaldia and at the end of the show, he slips into the lodge of the great actor "I thought it was film. When the curtain opened on this large light box, with the real Michael Simon, it was a shock when all the fans are gone, Michel Simon, who turned to makeup me and asked me what I wanted. I told him: "I want to make movies. Do you think it possible? He stared a long moment, then with this huge voice: of course it is possible " In the aftermath, the actor wrote him a recommendation to the attention of his manager.
Then he 'productions without means. Gérard Depardieu while shooting the movie Bertrand Blier's Going Places with Patrick Dewaere Eric Le Hung directed the film from the screenplay by Tony Gatlif 'Rabies in hand'.
This sort of stuff really lessens the quality of this article, which is a shame; I found this article through a film of his on today's front page. (... that in the road movie Children of the Stork, which highlights themes of social exclusion and illegal immigration, a stork must obtain a forged passport to cross the Franco-German border? <- 5th August 2011) Comics (talk) 03:43, 5 August 2011 (UTC)[reply]