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Chantal Akerman

Highest Rated: 100% News From Home (1977)

Lowest Rated: 60% From the Other Side (2002)

Birthday: Jun 6, 1950

Birthplace: Brussels, Belgium

One of the most significant independent filmmakers of her era, Chantal Akerman possessed a pronounced visual and narrative style, influenced by structuralism and minimalism, which offers astute insights into women's role in modern culture. Akerman's interest in film was sparked at the age of 15 by a viewing of Jean-Luc Godard's "Pierrot le Fou" (1965), prompting her to enroll in the Belgian film school, INSAS. After about two years' study she quit school, eager to begin making films rather than sitting in a classroom. Akerman saved money from clerical and waitressing jobs to make several short films which received minimal recognition. It was not until she moved to New York in 1971 that Akerman began to develop her distinctive visual style and to deal with those themes which dominated her work. In America she became acquainted with the films of the avant-garde, specifically those of Michael Snow and Stan Brakhage. Her first two features, "Hotel Monterey" (1972) and "Je Tu Il Elle" (1974), with their studiously static camerawork and minimal dialogue, were early indications of the visual style which came to full flowering in "Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles" (1975). The reception of this 200-minute, minimally plotted film was mixed. It was criticized by many as a boring and meaningless minimalist exercise; Akerman's defenders, however, were awed by her visual aesthetic and use of real time to emphasize the routine of her protagonist's world. Thanks to the film's exposure, Akerman was able to secure financial backing from the Gaumont company and from German TV for the striking "Les Rendezvous d'Anna" (1978). Her first semi-commercial effort, it featured popular French actors Aurore Clement and Jean-Pierre Cassel in a story of a female director trekking across Europe to promote her latest film. Again, static camerawork and minimal dialogue created a sense of alienation which mirrored the emptiness and insincerity of the protagonist's encounters. After failing to raise $25 million for an adaptation of Isaac Bashevis Singer's 1969 novel "The Manor," Akerman returned to independent production with "All Night Long" (1982), an insightful drama contrasting romantic illusions with harsh realities. Akerman's "Golden Eighties" (1986) was a satire of musicals set completely within the confines of a Brussels shopping mall. Here too her concern was with idealized notions of romance; unlike her earlier works, however, the central story is complemented by several subplots and the film's pacing is a little more sprightly, although Akerman's signature static camera provides a unique perspective on the structured world of the shopping mall. In 1988 Akerman returned to New York to film "American Stories/Food, Family and Philosophy," an exploration of her Jewish heritage through a series of stories told by immigrants. In the '90s, Akerman moved into more commercial filmmaking as the independent film boom allowed more idiosyncratic cinematic approaches into the mainstream. The drama "Night and Day" (1991) attracted widespread critical attention, and was followed by "A Couch in New York" (1996), Akerman's most accessible film to date, starring William Hurt, Juliette Binoche, and Richard Jenkins. For the rest of her career, Akerman split her attention between experimental films, documentaries, and narrative features like "The Captive" (2000) and "Tomorrow We Move" (2004), both of which were co-written by Dutch novelist and theorist Eric de Kuyper. An adaptation of the Joseph Conrad novel "Almayer's Folly" (2010) received widespread critical acclaim. Akerman's final film, "No Home Movie" (2015), was a documentary about her mother, Natalia (who died in 2014), and her inability to speak about her experiences at Auschwitz. Chantal Akerman committed suicide on or about October 5, 2015, in Paris. She was 65 years old.

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Highest-Rated Movies

100% 66% News From Home
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100% I Don't Belong Anywhere: The Cinema of Chantal Akerman
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100% 65% I, You, She, He
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95% 79% Jeanne Dielman, 23 Quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles
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90% 70% No Home Movie
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86% 41% Almayer's Folly
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79% 48% The Captive
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71% 85% Meetings With Anna
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60% 78% From the Other Side
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Down There
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Filmography

Movies TV Shows
No Home Movie 90% 70% 2015 Director, Producer, Cinematographer I Don't Belong Anywhere: The Cinema of Chantal Akerman 100% 2015 Actor Almayer's Folly 86% 41% 2011 Director, Screenwriter, Producer Chantal Akerman, From Here 2010 Self State of the World 43% 2007 Director Down There 2006 Director, Writer, Cinematographer Tomorrow We Move 50% 2004 Director, Writer From the Other Side 60% 78% 2002 Director, Writer The Captive 79% 48% 2000 Director, Screenwriter Sud 60% 1999 Director, Writer A Couch in New York 40% 1996 Director, Writer From the East 79% 1993 Director, Screenwriter Against Oblivion 1992 Director Night and Day 78% 1991 Director American Stories 1989 Director, Screenwriter Histoires d'Amérique: Food, Family and Philosophy 1989 Director, Screenwriter Trois strophes sur le nom de Sacher 1989 Director Window Shopping 1986 Director Letters Home 1986 Director Golden Eighties 1986 Director, Screenwriter Seven Women, Seven Sins 1986 Director, Screenwriter She Spent So Many Hours Under the Sun Lamps 1985 Actor J'ai faim, j'ai froid 1984 Director On Tour With Pina Bausch 50% 1983 Director Man With a Suitcase 1983 Actor, Director, Screenwriter
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