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Roland Joffé

 
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Roland Joffé

Biography

Steeped in the traditions of British stage and television, director Roland Joffé has fashioned a career which veers between highbrow, left-leaning historical epics and sexually charged high camp, sometimes within the same film. Born and raised in Manchester, England, Joffé leapt into the theater scene with the Young Vic troupe; after graduating from Manchester University, he found a career with the troupe's counterpart, the aptly named Old Vic. In the late '70s, the director began to dabble in documentary and dramatic television. The journalistic style he developed on the small screen would brilliantly inform his feature debut, The Killing Fields, in 1984. Based upon true accounts of Cambodia's bloody Kahmer Rouge takeover in the mid-'70s, the politically charged film managed to connect with both critics and audiences, winning Academy awards for cinematography, editing, and Best Supporting Actor (the latter for Dr. Haing S. Ngor, who had experienced the injustices of Cambodia firsthand). Joffé followed up on his auspicious debut with The Mission (1986), a tragic story of two disparate but equally disastrous attempts to settle 18th century Latin America. Though the picture got a positive-to-mixed reception from critics, it garnered a boatload of Academy award nominations as well as the Golden Palm at the Cannes Film Festival.

The director's output since The Mission has been wildly varied in tone and quality. The high-minded, thinly conceived, and unfortunately titled Fat Man and Little Boy was notable only for having the first "grown-up" performance from former teen star John Cusack. 1992's film adaptation of Dominique Lapierre's novel City of Joy seemed a return to form, as it touched upon many of the director's pet themes: culture clashes, the sometimes-disillusioning effects of altruism, and the splendor of nature. While many critics admired Joffé's effort (and the lead performance of an against-type Patrick Swayze), the Calcutta-set film went largely ignored by moviegoers. Unfortunately, Joffé would be far from ignored -- at least by critics -- when he unleashed his "freely adapted" (read "sexed-up") version of The Scarlet Letter on the public in 1995. Garnering an orgy of guffaws from the press ("It makes Hester's secret seem more like Victoria's," wrote Richard Corliss in Time), the flop almost single-handedly destroyed Demi Moore's career.

In 1999, Joffé meekly emerged from his own Hester Prynne-like exile to attempt a hip, youthful neo-noir, Goodbye Lover. As star-studded as it was convoluted, the film (which had languished on Warner Bros.' shelf for some time) received the briefest of releases before its appearance on cable television. Perhaps in a further bid for the coveted youth market, the 54-year-old director also decided that same year to lend his name as executive producer to the MTV network's vapidly explicit teen soap opera Undressed. The one-two punch of Undressed and Lover prompted many to opine that the once-prestigious Joffé had "lost his way."

Those fears were assuaged -- at least thematically -- when the director's lavish costume drama Vatel was chosen to open the 2000 Cannes Film Festival. Starring Gérard Depardieu as the legendary French chef chosen to serve King Louis XIV, the Tom Stoppard-penned film was prepped for a high-profile domestic release that Christmas. ~ Michael Hastings, Rovi
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Roland Joffé

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Roland Joffé
Born 17 November 1945 (1945-11-17) (age 66)
London, England, UK
Occupation Film director, producer, screenwriter
Years active 1960–present
Spouse Jane Lapotaire (m. 1974–1980) «start: (1974)–end+1: (1981)»"Marriage: Jane Lapotaire to Roland Joffé" Location: (linkback://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roland_Joff%C3%A9) [1]
Children Rowan Joffé, Nathalie Lunghi
Website
RolandJoffe.com

Roland Joffé (born 17 November 1945) is an English-French film director who is known for his Oscar nominated movies, The Killing Fields and The Mission. He began his career in television. His early television credits included episodes of Coronation Street and an adaptation of The Stars Look Down for Granada. He gained a reputation for hard-hitting political stories with the series Bill Brand and factual dramas for Play for Today.

Contents

Education

Joffé was educated at two independent schools: the Lycée Français Charles de Gaulle in London, and Carmel College in Wallingford, Oxfordshire, which was Europe's only Jewish boarding school, until it closed in 1997. He completed his formal education at the University of Manchester.

Career

BBC/MI5 Blacklisting

In the early 1970s, Joffé had attended Workers’ Revolutionary Party meetings, but he never became a party member, and by 1977 he had long severed his association with it: “I was very interested in politics at that time. But I was interested in what all the political parties were doing, not just the WRP, and I was never actively involved.”[2]

In 1977, Joffé was commissioned by the BBC to direct a play The Spongers. However, Joffé had been blacklisted: the play's producer, Tony Garnett, was informed that MI5 files listed Joffé as a “security risk” due to his left wing views. Only after Garnett threatened he would “go public”, was the veto on Joffé's appointment withdrawn. Joffé’s play The Spongers went on to do very well, winning a prestigious Prix Italia award.[2]

Film Director

His first two feature films (The Killing Fields, 1984, and The Mission, 1986) each garnered him an Academy Award nomination for Best Director. Joffé worked closely with producer David Puttnam on each film. The Killing Fields detailed the friendship of two men, an American journalist for The New York Times, and his translator, a prisoner of the Khmer Rouge in Communist Cambodia. It won three Academy Awards (for Best Supporting Actor, Best Cinematography, and Best Film Editing) and was nominated for four more (including Best Picture and Best Director). The Mission was a story of conflict between Jesuit missionaries in South America, trying to convert the Guaraní Indians, and Portuguese colonials, who want to enslave the natives. It won the Palme d'Or and Technical Grand Jury Prize at the 1986 Cannes Film Festival. The film achieved six Academy Awards nominations – including for Best Picture, Best Director, and Ennio Morricone's acclaimed Best Original Score – and won one, for Best Cinematography.

Since his initial acclaim, Joffé's film career has been less successful. In 1993, he produced and partially directed a big budget adaptation of the video game Super Mario Bros.. The film struggled to make back its budget. His 1995 adaptation of The Scarlet Letter was a critical and financial disaster, and his 2007 horror film Captivity drew controversy with its advertising billboards, perceived as exploitative and misogynistic. He received Razzie Nominations for Worst Director for The Scarlet Letter and Captivity.

His latest release, There Be Dragons, has already garnered press attention as it deals with and is largely funded by the Catholic organisation, Opus Dei.[3][4] A movie about faith and forgiveness, There Be Dragons is a project that Joffé says has a message he's proud to say on film. In an interview with CBN.com, he stated, "I have a very deep emotional investment in this film. I feel that I really want to stand behind what it says to us as human beings."[5]

Joffé is currently in post-production of the Anglo-Indian historical epic romance time travel adventure film, Singularity. The film will be showcased at the 65th annual Cannes International Film Festival in May 2012.[6][7]

Filmography

Awards and Nominations

Academy Awards:

BAFTA Awards:

Berlin International Film Festival:

Cannes Film Festival:

  • 1986: Golden Palm (Mission, won)
  • 1986: Technical Grand Prize (Mission, won)

Golden Globes:

Prix Italia:

  • 1978: The Spongers[8]

Personal life

Joffé is of Jewish descent. He is not related to the French film director Arthur Joffé as often wrongly stated. Joffé's adopted grandfather was the renowned sculptor Jacob Epstein. He is an agnostic.[9]

Joffé was formerly married to actress Jane Lapotaire and had a relationship with actress Cherie Lunghi.[10] He has a son, Rowan Joffé (b. 1973), with the former, and a daughter, Nathalie Lunghi (b. 1986), with the latter.

Joffé is a board member of the nonprofit organization Operation USA. He was the Official Patron of the 2011 Cambodia Volleyball World Cup held from July 23 to July 29 at the National Olympic Stadium Phnom Penh.[11]

References

  1. ^ According to the GRO at findmypast.co.uk, Roland V I Joffe married Jane E M Lapotaire in 1974
  2. ^ a b Mark Hollingsworth; Richard Norton-Taylor (1988). "MI5 and the BBC – Stamping the 'Christmas Tree' files". Blacklist: The Inside Story of Political Vetting. London: Hogarth Press. p. 104. ISBN 0701208112 (pbk.). http://bilderberg.org/mi5bbc.htm /
  3. ^ Roland Joffé's new film Mission: to uncover secrets of the Opus Dei The Guardian. 8 June 2009
  4. ^ Bringing a Saint’s Life to the Screen The New York Times. 22 August 2009
  5. ^ Director Roland Joffé Explains "There Be Dragons"", CBN.com.
  6. ^ "Hartnett to star for Joffe in Corsan's Singularity". Screen Daily (Jeremy Kay). 8 November 2010. http://www.screendaily.com/festivals/afm/afm-news/hartnett-to-star-for-joffe-in-corsans-singularity/5020366.article. Retrieved 2010-11-20. 
  7. ^ "Bips wraps up first Hollywood film". Hindustan Times (Prashant Singh). August 4, 2011. http://www.hindustantimes.com/rssfeed/Bollywood/Bips-wraps-up-first-Hollywood-film/Article1-728168.aspx?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=HT+RSS+Entertainment+-+Top+Stories. Retrieved 2011-08-04. 
  8. ^ Prix Italia, Winners 1949 - 2010, RAI
  9. ^ Roland Joffé Interview to the National Catholic Register
  10. ^ "Strictly Come Dancing's Cherie Lunghi had sham marriage". Mirror.co.uk. 11 October 2008. http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/top-stories/2008/10/11/strictly-come-dancing-s-cherie-lunghi-had-sham-marriage-115875-20794916. Retrieved 2008-11-19. 
  11. ^ "Roland Joffé Announced as Patron of World Cup". Volleyball World Cup. 16 June 2011. http://2011volleyballworldcup.org/2011/06/roland-joffe-announced-as-patron-of-world-cup/. Retrieved 2011-07-12. 

External links


 
 
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