Background
Silberman was born in Łódź, then a part of the Russian Empire in a Jewish family.
Silberman was born in Łódź, then a part of the Russian Empire in a Jewish family.
During World World War II Silberman survived Nazi concentration camps and eventually settled in Paris. One of his first works as a film producer was Jean-Pierre Melville"s 1955 film Bob the Gambler, a precursor to the French New Wave movement. Silberman"s most notable collaborations were with the surrealist film director Luis Buñuel.
The pair, along with screenwriter Jean-Claude Carrière, who Silberman introduced to Buñuel, worked together on a number of films, starting with the 1964 film Diary of a Chambermaid.
Silberman had founded his own production company, Greenwich Film Productions, in 1966. The company was responsible for the production of over 15 films.
In 1981, Silberman produced his most financially successful film, Jean-Jacques Beineix"s Diva. The film wasn"t very well received in the country of its origin, France, but became a box-office hit abroad.
The money gained from the movie enabled Silberman to provide funding for Akira Kurosawa"s ambitious 1985 film Ran, which at the time of its making was the most expensive Japanese film ever.
He died in Paris in 2003 at the age of 86.