Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Claire Denis

 
Director: Claire Denis
  • Occupation: Director, Writer, Actor
  • Active: '80s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama
  • Career Highlights: Beau Travail, Chocolat, Wings of Desire
  • First Major Screen Credit: Paris, Texas (1983)

Biography

A provocative director whose films offer richly textured, contemplative examinations of cross-cultural tensions and alienation, Claire Denis is one of French cinema's most distinctive and humanistic storytellers. A prolific filmmaker who is more concerned with the drive of her characters rather than the plot that weaves them together, she has been dubbed by one critic as one of the only current French directors who "has been able to reconcile the lyricism of French cinema with the impulse to capture the often harsh face of contemporary France."

Born in Paris on April 21, 1948, Denis, the daughter of a civil servant, was raised in a series of African countries until she was 14, when her family returned to France. She learned about filmmaking as an assistant to a number of notable directors, including Wim Wenders (Paris, Texas, Wings of Desire), Jim Jarmusch (Down by Law), and Costa-Gavras (Hanna K.). She made her directorial and screenwriting debut in 1988 with Chocolat, a lush exploration of colonial life and emotional conflicts in 1950s West Africa as viewed through the eyes of a young French girl. The film, which was inspired by Denis' own experiences in Africa and those of working amongst the stark Southwest landscapes of Paris, Texas, proved to be a very auspicious debut, screening at Cannes that year and earning both a Golden Palm nomination and a César nomination for Best New Director.

Denis followed her debut the next year with Man No Run, a documentary about Les Têtes Brulées ("the Flaming Heads"), a Cameroon band on their first French tour. She then made S'en fout la mort (No Fear, No Die, 1990), a story about two black men, one from Africa and one from the Caribbean, living on the fringes of French society. Like her previous films, it gave specific focus to cultural displacement and racial conflict, themes that would be further explored in J'ai Pas Sommeil (I Can't Sleep, 1994). Set in a multi-ethnic Parisian neighborhood, the film looked at the various tensions -- cultural, familial, and otherwise -- at work among various immigrants, including a Lithuanian actress and an expatriate Caribbean family harboring a serial killer.

Denis, who occasionally directs for television, next embarked on U.S. Go Home (1994) one part of Tous les Garçons et les Filles de Leur Age, a made-for-TV series depicting the adolescence of nine well-known directors. Denis' section chronicled 24 hours in the lives of three teenagers trying to lose their virginity in the mid-'60s. It marked the director's first collaboration with Grégoire Colin, a dark-eyed, arresting young actor whom Denis would also employ to great effect in both Nénette et Boni and Beau Travail.

The former film, made in 1996, was another coming-of-age drama that centered on the relationship between a lovelorn young man (Colin) and his rebellious, pregnant 15-year-old sister (Alice Houri). It received an enthusiastic international reception and a number of film festival honors, and it was one of the director's most successful films to date. She followed it three years later with Beau Travail, a military drama based loosely on Herman Melville's Billy Budd, Sailor. Set in East Africa, it offered a taut psychological exploration of the increasingly antagonistic relationship between a Foreign Legion officer (Denis Lavant) and a charismatic new recruit (Colin). The film garnered a warm reception, with a number of critics commenting on Denis' ability to capture the gorgeously ascetic physical setting of her story, as well as her success in replacing Melville's verbosity with a silence that communicated volumes. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Claire Denis
Top
Claire Denis
Born 21 April 1948
Paris, France

Claire Denis (born 21 April 1948) is a French film director.

Contents

Early life

Denis was born in Paris, France, and raised in colonial Africa, where her father was a French civil servant. She moved houses every two years because her father wanted them to know about geography. She used to watch the old damaged copies of war films that America would send when she was growing up in Africa. As an adolescent she loved to read. She would read all the required material in school, but would then sneak her mother's detective stories at night.[1]

Career

Denis initially studied economics, but, she has said, "It was completely suicidal. Everything pissed me off."[1] She then went to the IDHEC, the French film school, at the encouragement of her husband. He told her she needed to figure out what she wanted to do.[1] She graduated from the IDHEC, and served as assistant to Jacques Rivette, Costa-Gavras, Jim Jarmusch, and Wim Wenders.

Her debut feature film Chocolat (1988), a semi-autobiographical meditation on African colonialism, won her critical acclaim. With films such as US Go Home (1994), Nénette et Boni (1996), Beau travail (1999), Trouble Every Day (2001), and Vendredi soir (2002) she established a reputation as a filmmaker who "has been able to reconcile the lyricism of French cinema with the impulse to capture the often harsh face of contemporary France."[2]

Denis was a band leader, worked as an actress, notably in Venus Beauty Institute (2000), and directed for French TV. Two of her movies (L'Intrus and her contribution to Ten Minutes Older: The Cello) were inspired by the French philosopher Jean-Luc Nancy.[citation needed]

Style

She prefers location work over studio work. She sometimes places her actors as if they were positioned for still photography. She uses longer takes with a stationary camera and frames things in long shot, resulting in fewer close ups. This is most likely from the influence of Wenders and Jarmusch.

Filmography

Feature films

Short films

  • Keep It for Yourself (1991)
  • Contre l'oubli / Against Oblivion (1991)
    • segment: Pour Ushari Ahmed Mahmoud, Soudan
  • Boom-Boom (1994)
  • Tous les garçons et les filles de leur âge / All the Boys and the Girls of Their Age (1994)
    • segment: US Go Home
  • À propos de Nice, la suite (1995)
    • segment: Nice, Very Nice
  • Ten Minutes Older: The Cello (2002)
    • segment: Vers Nancy / Towards Nancy

Documentary films

  • Man No Run (1989)
  • Jacques Rivette, le veilleur / Jacques Rivette, the Watchman (1990)
  • Vers Mathilde / Towards Mathilde (2005)

Further reading

  • "L'intrus: An Interview with Claire Denis" by Damon Smith (Senses of Cinema).
  • Martine Beugnet, Claire Denis, 2004, Manchester University Press, Manchester and New York.
  • Judith Mayne, Claire Denis, 2005, University of Illinois Press, Urbana and Chicago.

References

External links


 
 
Learn More
Nénette et Boni (1996 Drama Film)
Isaach de Bankolé (Actor, Drama/Comedy)
Laurent Grévill (Actor, Drama/Comedy Drama)

Is claire beautiful? Read answer...
Who is claire hamilton? Read answer...
Who is claire hsieh? Read answer...

Help us answer these
When do claire's have sales?
Who is Claire Zhou?
Who is Claire Stoner?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Director. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Claire Denis" Read more

 

Mentioned in