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Nick Broomfield

 
Director: Nick Broomfield
  • Born: in London, England
  • Occupation: Director, Actor
  • Active: '70s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Culture & Society, Drama
  • Career Highlights: Monster in a Box, Soldier Girls, Aileen: The Life and Death of a Serial Killer
  • First Major Screen Credit: Juvenile Liaisons (1975)

Biography

British born Nick Broomfield has filmed in brothels, military training camps, and detention homes to create his sometimes controversial documentaries. "I'm not making a film where there are going to be a lot of experts in white coats telling the audience what the situation is," Broomfield told Prairie Miller of Mini Reviews, "I don't like those kinds of films." He studied law at the University of Cardiff and political science at Essex University before entering, and eventually graduating from, the National Film School. By 1971 he had completed his first 18-minute film titled Who Cares, which documented Liverpool residents who had been transplanted to a suburban high rise.

Broomfield's career can be divided into two parts, represented by two distinct styles. Between the late '70s and mid-'80s, he filmed in a cinema vérité style, working with cinematographers Joan Churchill and Sandi Sissel. Many of these early films like Behind the Rent Strike and Marriage Guidance centered on social problems. Tattooed Tears (1978) went inside a youth detention camp in California while Soldier Girls (1981) followed a platoon of female recruits during basic training at Fort Gordon, GA. The latter film received Britain's Robert Flaherty Award for Best Feature Documentary. Chicken Ranch (1983) mirrored later Broomfield documentaries by investigating life inside the famous Nevada brothel, while both Lily Tomlin (1986) and Driving Me Crazy (1988) observed the planning and rehearsal of stage shows.

It was during the filming of Driving Me Crazy that Broomfield happened upon a technique that would become central to his films during the '90s. The story line had begun to spin out of control. Out of desperation, he decided to appear before the camera and add narration. After several transitional years that included a feature film, Dark Obsession (1990), he would make a series of films that would redefine his career. In Tracking Down Maggie (1994), the filmmaker began a relentless quest to interview ex-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. The primary difference, compared to his earlier films, is that Broomfield's presence becomes part of the story in a manner similar to Michael Moore's in Roger & Me.

For his next films Broomfield turned to gritty American subjects. Heidi Fleiss: Hollywood Madam (1995), Fetishes (1996), and Kurt and Courtney (1998) have been described by some as "tabloid journalism." "Maybe they aren't the most historical figures in a necessarily respectable way," Broomfield explained to Miller, "but they are nonetheless very indicative of aspects of our culture and the way it operates." Kurt and Courtney investigated the death of Kurt Cobain and became controversial due to the opposition and threatened lawsuits of Courtney Love (eventually causing the film to be withdrawn from Sundance). Broomfield, however, persevered and the film received a theatrical release. His overt technique of courting controversy and choice of offbeat material has made him an important voice in reshaping the style and content of the contemporary documentary. ~ Ronnie D. Lankford, Jr., All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Nick Broomfield
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Nick Broomfield

Nick Broomfield in 2005
Born January 30, 1948 (1948-01-30) (age 61)
London, England
Alma mater National Film and Television School
Occupation Filmmaker
Website
www.nickbroomfield.com

Nicholas Broomfield (born 30 January 1948, in London) is an English documentary filmmaker. He studied Law at Cardiff University, and political science at the University of Essex; subsequently, he studied film at the National Film and Television School. Broomfield films with a minimum of crew, just himself and one or two camera operators, which gives his documentaries a distinctive style. Broomfield himself is often in shot holding the sound boom.

Contents

Career

Broomfield's early style was very conventional Cinéma vérité: the juxtaposition of observed scenes. He would not provide much explanation by way of voice-over or text, rather letting the film talk for itself.

It was not until Driving Me Crazy (1988) that Broomfield, already a known filmmaker, appeared on-screen for the first time. After several arguments regarding the budget and nature of the film, he decided that he would only make the documentary if he was able to conduct a sort of experiment by filming the process of making the film—the arguments, the failed interviews and the dead-ends.[citation needed]

This shift in filmmaking style was also heavily influenced by Broomfield's experience in attempting to release his earlier film Lily Tomlin, which chronicled the star's one-woman show The Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe. Once completed, Tomlin claimed the film was a spoiler for the actual show and she filed suit for $7 million against Broomfield. The documentary was shown on public television but not widely released. Eventually the footage of the stage show shot by Broomfield was used in the video release of the one-woman show.[citation needed]

It is for this reflexive filmmaking style—a film being about the making of itself as much as about its subject—that Broomfield is best known. His influence on documentary is clear: Michael Moore, Louis Theroux and Morgan Spurlock have all adopted a similar style for their recent box-office hits.[1] Filmmakers who use this style have been referred to as Les Nouvelles Egotistes; others have likened his work to the gonzo reporting of Hunter S. Thompson.[2]

Broomfield is an alumnus of the National Film and Television School; he co-wrote the documentary Kurt and Courtney (1998) with American filmmaker Joan Churchill.

In 2006 he completed a drama called Ghosts for Channel 4 inspired by the 2004 Morecambe Bay cockling disaster when 23 Chinese immigrant cockle pickers drowned after being cut off by the tides.

His 2006 project on the Haditha killings, Battle For Haditha, was shot in a documentary style although the events and characters were all dramatized. Instead of a detailed script, the actors were only given an outline of each scene and where the story was going. The outline is reportedly based on rumours, as the trial had not even begun when the filming began.[3][4][5]

Films

Other work

In 1999, Broomfield made a series of five commercials for Volkswagen. Each of these featured Broomfield with his trademark sound boom "investigating" rumours about the soon-to-be released Volkswagen Passat.

Awards

  • British Academy Award (BAFTA)
  • Prix Italia
  • The Dupont Columbia Award for Outstanding Journalism
  • The Peabody
  • The Royal Television Society Award
  • First Prize, Sundance Film Festival
  • John Grierson Award
  • Robert Flaherty Award
  • The Hague Peace Prize
  • The Chris Award
  • The Blue Ribbon
  • The California State Bar Award
  • First Prize, Chicago Film Festival
  • First Prize, US Film Festival
  • First Prize, Festival of Mannheim
  • First Prize, Festival di Popoli
  • Special Jury Award, Melbourne Film Festival

Nick was also given a BAFTA tribute evening on March 8, 2005.

See also

References

Encyclopedia of the Documentary Film, ed. Ian Aitken. London: Routledge (2005)

  1. ^ Hoggart, Paul (21 February 2006). "Following the leader". The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2006/feb/21/southafrica.television?gusrc=rss&feed=film2. Retrieved 2009-04-28. 
  2. ^ Byrnes, Paul (13 February 2003). "Review: Biggie And Tupac". Sydney Morning Herald. http://www.smh.com.au/cgi-bin/common/popupPrintArticle.pl?path=/articles/2003/02/12/1044927659454.html. Retrieved 2009-04-28. 
  3. ^ [1] Dreamachine snap up Nick Broomfield Iraq war pic
  4. ^ [2] Iraq war spreads to Hollywood
  5. ^ [3] Director Nick Broomfield on Haditha

Further reading

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Director. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Nick Broomfield at LocateTV.com

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