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Marc Forster

 
Director: Marc Forster
  • Occupation: Director, Writer
  • Active: 2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Comedy Drama
  • Career Highlights: Everything Put Together, Finding Neverland, Monster's Ball
  • First Major Screen Credit: Everything Put Together (2000)

Biography

It often seems that people find their true callings in the most unexpected manner, and for a young boy growing up in a remote town in Switzerland who didn't see a movie until he was 12 years old, the prospect of growing up to become a movie director may have seemed as unlikely as they come. Upon viewing director Francis Ford Coppola's acclaimed 1979 war drama Apocalypse Now, however, young Marc Forster had an epiphany that would eventually lead him to Hollywood and beyond. Though the German-born youngster's bucolic childhood was virtually celluloid-free, the sheer awe of Coppola's striking vision eventually led the ambitious and imaginative Forster to dive headlong into a career that might otherwise have never occurred to him even in his wildest dreams. In 1990, Forster left his home in Switzerland to enter New York University's acclaimed film program, with the young director's freshman feature hitting the festival circuit a mere five years after his graduation. A suitable cinematic calling card that won Forster the Audience Award for Best Feature at the 1996 Slamdance Festival, Loungers earned the emerging writer/director a solid reputation for his ability to balance story with style. Another five years would follow before Forster once again took to the screen for the haunting psychological drama Everything Put Together, which offered the tale of a mother who struggles to maintain her sanity following the tragic and unexpected death of her infant son. Not only did the film transcend its digital-video origins to weave a heart-wrenching tale of loss and mental decay, but it also earned Forster a nomination for the Grand Jury Prize at the 2000 Sundance Film Festival in addition to taking home the "Someone to Watch" award at the 2001 Independent Spirit Awards.

Forster's success with Everything Put Together proved his ability to capture such a suffocating atmosphere on digital video, and he was next approached as a prospect to direct Monster's Ball. Though the script had been floating around Hollywood for nearly five years by the time it crossed Forster's desk, the high-priced demands of the A-list stars and directors who had shown interest -- combined with the studio's insistence that the film be made for less that five million dollars -- found the tide slowly turning in the ambitious young director's favor. When Monster's Ball was released in 2001, there was little doubt that Forster had been the right choice to direct the downbeat drama. In addition to earning star Halle Berry an Oscar for her emotionally devastating performance as a widow whose passionate affair with a prison guard proves a last-ditch effort to jump-start her numbed emotions, the film also found Forster's Inbox flooding with tempting offers. When the smoke cleared and the director had found adequate time to carefully consider his future prospects, he eventually announced that he would be directing screen heavies Johnny Depp and Kate Winslet in the fact-based drama Finding Neverland (2004), a film which served to detail author J.M. Barrie's motivation behind the penning of his children's classic Peter Pan. Even before that film hit theaters stateside, Forster was in post-production on Stay, a labyrinthine thriller starring Ewan McGregor that told the dark tale of an Ivy League professor who attempts to alter the tragic fate of one of his students. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Marc Forster
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Marc Forster

Forster in November 2008
Born January 27, 1969 (1969-01-27) (age 40)
Illertissen, Neu-Ulm, Bavaria, West Germany
Occupation film director & screenwriter
Years active 1995 - present

Marc Forster (born January 27, 1969(1969-01-27)) is a German-Swiss filmmaker and screenwriter, known for films such as Monster's Ball, Finding Neverland, Stranger than Fiction, The Kite Runner, and Quantum of Solace.

Contents

Life and career

Marc Forster was born in Au (today Illertissen), in the Neu-Ulm district of Bavaria, to a wealthy family. As the son of a German doctor and a Swiss architect, Forster grew up in Davos, a winter resort in eastern Switzerland. When still very young, his family moved to Switzerland after learning they were blacklisted by the Baader-Meinhoff group, the predecessor to the German terrorist organisation Red Army Faction (RAF).[1] The first film he saw in a cinema was Apocalypse Now by Francis Ford Coppola, when he was 12. He was so excited about it, that from that time on he didn't hesitate when asked about his dream job: "Director".

In 1990, when he was 20 years old, Forster moved to New York, in the United States. For the next three years, he attended New York University's film school, making several documentary films. In 1995, he moved to Hollywood and shot an experimental low budget film ($10,000) called Loungers, which won the Slamdance Audience Award. Forster's first motion picture was the psychological drama Everything Put Together, which was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival.

His breakthrough film was Monster's Ball (2001), in which he directed Halle Berry in her Academy Award-winning performance as the wife of a man on death row. His next film, Finding Neverland (2004), was based on the life of author J.M. Barrie. The film was nominated for five Golden Globe Awards and seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture. Forster received BAFTA, Directors Guild of America, and Golden Globe nominations for his direction.

The thriller Stay (2005) starring Ewan McGregor and Naomi Watts was poorly received by critics. [2] The film grossed a scant $4 million (USD) in the United States. [3] Stranger than Fiction (2006), a surreal romantic comedy starring Will Ferrell, was a modest success at the box office, earning $54 million worldwide off a $30 million budget. [4]

Forster then directed an adaptation of Khaled Hosseini's The Kite Runner, scripted by repeat collaborator David Benioff and starring British newcomer Khalid Abdalla. The film follows an Afghani-American man who returns to his war-ravaged country to save the son of his former best friend. The Kite Runner was released on December 14, 2007.

In a complete turnaround in his usual field of films, Forster directed the twenty-second James Bond film, Quantum of Solace beginning on January 2, 2008. The film was released in the United Kingdom on October 31, 2008. [5][6]

He is a frequent collaborator with Kansas City based motion graphics firm MK12, who've designed the opening credit sequences and other surreal onscreen graphics for The Kite Runner, Stranger Than Fiction and Quantum of Solace.

Humanitarian efforts

Marc Forster was, together with Renée Zellweger, part of the 2005 HIV prevention campaign of the Swiss federal health department. He's shown smiling and making the V sign with his hand and the text "Don't get semen or blood in your mouth" and "Penetrate only with condoms". [1]

Selected filmography

Year Title No. of Oscar nominations No. of Oscar wins
1995 Loungers
2000 Everything Put Together
2001 Monster's Ball 2 1
2004 Finding Neverland 7 1
2005 Stay
2006 Stranger Than Fiction
2007 The Kite Runner 1
2008 Quantum of Solace

References

External links


 
 

 

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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 "Marc Forster" Read more

 

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