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==1993 to 1998==
==1993 to 1998==
''sex, lies, and videotape'' was followed by a series of low-budget box-office disappointments: ''[[Kafka (film)|Kafka]]'', a biopic mixing fact and Kafka's own fiction (notably ''[[The Castle (novel)|The Castle]]'' and ''[[The Trial]]''), written by [[Lem Dobbs]] and starring [[Jeremy Irons]] as [[Franz Kafka]]; ''[[King of the Hill (film)|King of the Hill]]'' ([[1993 in film|1993]]), a critically acclaimed [[Great Depression|Depression]]-era drama; ''[[Underneath (film)|Underneath]]'' ([[1995 in film|1995]]), a remake of [[Robert Siodmak]]'s [[1949 in film|1949]] film noir ''[[Criss Cross (1949 film)|Criss Cross]]''; and ''[[Schizopolis]]'' ([[1996 in film|1996]]), a comedy which he starred in, wrote, composed, and shot as well as directed.
''sex, lies, and videotape'' was followed by a series of low-budget box-office disappointments: ''[[Kafka (film)|Kafka]]'', a biopic mixing fact and Kafka's own fiction (notably ''[[The Castle (novel)|The Castle]]'' and ''[[The Trial]]''), written by [[Lem Dobbs]] and starring [[Jeremy Irons]] as [[Franz Kafka]]; ''[[King of the Hill (film)|King of the Hill]]'' ([[1993 in film|1993]]), a critically acclaimed [[Great Depression|Depression]]-era drama; ''[[Underneath (film)|Underneath]]'' ([[1995 in film|1995]]), a remake of [[Robert Siodmak]]'s [[1949 in film|1949]] film noir ''[[Criss Cross (1949 film)|Criss Cross]]''; and ''[[Schizopolis]]'' ([[1996 in film|1996]]), a comedy which he starred in, wrote, composed, and shot as well as directed. He also directed the Spalding Gray monologue film "Gray's Anatomy" in 1996.


Making good on his ''Schizopolis''-inspired "artistic wake-up call," his commercial slump ended in [[1998 in film|1998]] with ''[[Out of Sight]]'', a stylized adaptation of an [[Elmore Leonard]] novel, written by [[Scott Frank]] and starring [[George Clooney]] and [[Jennifer Lopez]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=1:136312~C|title=allmovie ((( Schizopolis &gt; Overview )))|accessdate=2007-12-19}}</ref>
Making good on his ''Schizopolis''-inspired "artistic wake-up call," his commercial slump ended in [[1998 in film|1998]] with ''[[Out of Sight]]'', a stylized adaptation of an [[Elmore Leonard]] novel, written by [[Scott Frank]] and starring [[George Clooney]] and [[Jennifer Lopez]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.allmovie.com/cg/avg.dll?p=avg&sql=1:136312~C|title=allmovie ((( Schizopolis &gt; Overview )))|accessdate=2007-12-19}}</ref>

Revision as of 21:25, 12 November 2008

Steven Soderbergh
Steven Soderbergh, July 2007
Born
Steven Andrew Soderbergh
Spouse(s)Betsy Brantley (div. 1994)
Jules Asner (2003–)
AwardsPalme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival
1989 sex, lies, and videotape

Steven Andrew Soderbergh (born January 14, 1963) is an American film producer, screenwriter, cinematographer, editor, and Academy Award-winning director. He is best known for directing the films Sex, Lies, and Videotape, Traffic, and the Ocean's Eleven franchise.

Early life and career

Soderbergh was born in Atlanta, Georgia, the son of Mary Ann (née Bernard) and Peter Andrew Soderbergh, who was a university administrator and educator.[1] He has Swedish ancestry (the family's original surname in Swedish, Söderberg, was changed to Soderbergh when they immigrated to the United States). When he was a child, his family moved from Atlanta to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, where his father became Dean of Education at Louisiana State University (LSU). There he discovered filmmaking as a teenager, directing short Super 8 mm films with equipment borrowed from LSU students.[2]

His primary high school education was at Louisiana State University Laboratory School, a K-12 school that is directed by the University. While still taking classes there around the age of fifteen, Soderbergh enrolled in the university's film animation class and began making short 16 mm films with secondhand equipment.[3]

Rather than attending LSU, Soderbergh tried his luck in Hollywood after graduating from high school; he worked as a game show scorer and cue card holder to make ends meet, and eventually found work as a freelance film editor.[4] His big break came when he directed the Grammy-nominated concert video 9012Live for the rock band Yes in 1985.[5]

Breakthrough: sex, lies, and videotape

It wasn't until Soderbergh came back to Baton Rouge that he conceived the idea for sex, lies, and videotape (1989), which he wrote in eight days.[6] The independent film won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival, became a worldwide commercial success and greatly contributed to the 1990s independent film revolution. At age 26, Soderbergh became the youngest director to win the festival's top award.[7] Movie critic Roger Ebert dubbed Soderbergh the "poster boy of the Sundance generation".[8]

1993 to 1998

sex, lies, and videotape was followed by a series of low-budget box-office disappointments: Kafka, a biopic mixing fact and Kafka's own fiction (notably The Castle and The Trial), written by Lem Dobbs and starring Jeremy Irons as Franz Kafka; King of the Hill (1993), a critically acclaimed Depression-era drama; Underneath (1995), a remake of Robert Siodmak's 1949 film noir Criss Cross; and Schizopolis (1996), a comedy which he starred in, wrote, composed, and shot as well as directed. He also directed the Spalding Gray monologue film "Gray's Anatomy" in 1996.

Making good on his Schizopolis-inspired "artistic wake-up call," his commercial slump ended in 1998 with Out of Sight, a stylized adaptation of an Elmore Leonard novel, written by Scott Frank and starring George Clooney and Jennifer Lopez.[9] The film was widely praised, though only a moderate box-office success. It reaffirmed Soderbergh's potential, sparking the beginnings of a lucrative artistic partnership between Clooney and Soderbergh.

1999 and 2000

Soderbergh followed up on the success of Out of Sight by making another crime caper, The Limey (1999), from an original screenplay by Lem Dobbs and starring veteran actors Terence Stamp and Peter Fonda. The film was well-received, but not as much as Erin Brockovich (2000), a "Rocky movie" he directed, written by Susannah Grant and starring Julia Roberts in her Oscar-winning role as a single mother taking on industry in a civil action.[10] Later that year, Soderbergh released his most ambitious project yet (with a running time of 147 minutes, the film had 135 speaking parts set in eight different cities), Traffic, a social drama written by Stephen Gaghan and featuring an ensemble cast.

Traffic became his most acclaimed movie since sex, lies, videotape, and earned him an Academy Award for Best Director. He was also nominated that same year for Erin Brockovich. He is the only director to have been nominated in the same year for Best Director for two different films by the Academy Awards, the Golden Globes and the Directors Guild of America. The double nomination was the first in 60 years. (In 1938, Michael Curtiz was nominated twice, for Angels with Dirty Faces and Four Daughters, but did not win for either film.)

2001 to 2007

Brad Pitt, George Clooney, Matt Damon, Andy Garcia, Julia Roberts, and Soderbergh in December 2001

Ocean's Eleven (2001), featuring an all-star cast and flashy aesthetics, is Soderbergh's highest grossing movie to date, grossing more than $183 million.[11] The film's star, George Clooney, subsequently appeared in Solaris (2002), marking the third time the two have headlined a film. In the same year, Soderbergh made Full Frontal which was shot mostly on digital video in an improvisional style that deliberately blurred the line between which actors were playing characters and which were playing fictionized versions of themselves. A film within a film, the title is a film industry reference to an actor or actress appearing fully nude (aka, "full frontal nudity"). Also in 2002, Soderbergh was elected First Vice President of the Directors Guild of America.[12]

Following up Full Frontal stylistically was Soderbergh next project, K Street (2003), a ten-part political HBO series he co-produced with Clooney. The series was noteworthy for being both partially improvised and each episode being produced in the 5 days prior to airing to take advantage of topical events that could be worked into the fictional narrative. Actual political players appeared as themselves, either in cameos or fictionalized versions of themselves (as were the leads, real life husband and wife James Carville and Mary Matalin). The show caused a stir during the 2004 Democratic Primary when Carville gave candidate Howard Dean a soundbite during a location shoot that Dean then used in a debate.

Ocean's Twelve (2004), a sequel to Ocean's Eleven, has followed. The Good German a romantic drama set in post-war Berlin starring Cate Blanchett and Clooney was released in late 2006. The sixth pairing of Clooney and Soderbergh, Ocean's Thirteen, was released in June 2007.

Latest work

In 2006, Soderbergh raised eyebrows with Bubble, a $1.6 million film featuring a cast of nonprofessional actors. It opened in selected theaters and HDNet simultaneously, and four days later on DVD. Industry heads were reportedly watching how the film performed, as its unusual release schedule could have implications for future feature films.[13][14] Theater-owners, who at the time had been suffering from dropping attendance rates, did not welcome so-called "day-and-date" movies.[15] National Association of Theatre Owners president and CEO John Fithian indirectly called the film's release model "the biggest threat to the viability of the cinema industry today."[16] Soderbergh's response to such criticism: "I don't think it's going to destroy the movie-going experience any more than the ability to get takeout has destroyed the restaurant business." The film did poor business both at the box office and on the home video market.[17] Nevertheless, Soderbergh is on contract to deliver five more day-and-date movies. In fall of 2006 he contributed a mini-essay on hotel pornography, along with an accompanying series of long-exposure photographs, to Anthem magazine's November/December issue.

In 2007, Soderbergh and Tony Gilroy contributed an audio commentary to the DVD re-release of The Third Man by the Criterion Collection.

On May 22, 2008, Che, which may be released in theatres in two parts titled The Argentine[18] and Guerrilla,[19] was presented in the main competition of the 2008 Cannes film festival. Benicio del Toro plays Argentine guerrilla Ernesto "Che" Guevara in an epic four-hour double bill which looks first at his role in the Cuban uprising before moving to his campaign and eventual death in Bolivia.[20][21]

Soderbergh is currently shooting his new feature film The Girlfriend Experience in New York. His lead actress is adult film star Sasha Grey.[22][23][24]

Soderbergh is also developing his next directing effort, a 3-D live-action rock musical film based on Cleopatra's life, with Catherine Zeta-Jones and Hugh Jackman in talks to play Cleopatra and Mark Antony respectively.[25]

Directorial style and collaborations with actors

"I've always gotten along with them," says Soderbergh of actors, "I try and make sure they're OK, and when they're in the zone, I leave them alone. I don't get in their way." His non-intrusive directorial style has attracted repeat performances by many high-profile movie stars.[26] Julia Roberts had supporting roles in Ocean's Eleven, Ocean's Twelve, and Full Frontal, and won an Academy Award for Best Actress for her lead in Erin Brockovich. Benicio del Toro, who also won an Academy Award for his work in a Soderbergh film (Traffic), is starring in the upcoming Guerrilla and The Argentine. Other frequent sightings in Soderbergh's filmography include character actors Luis Guzmán (Out of Sight, The Limey, and Traffic) and Don Cheadle (Out of Sight, Traffic, Ocean's Eleven, Ocean's Twelve, and Ocean's Thirteen). But the actor who played the leading role in no fewer than six of his films is George Clooney, with whom he co-owns the film production company, Section Eight Productions. Section Eight produced the critical hits Far From Heaven, Insomnia, and Syriana as well as the Clooney-directed films Confessions of a Dangerous Mind and Good Night, and Good Luck.

Soderbergh often acts as his own director of photography under the alias of Peter Andrews and occasionally as his own editor under the alias of Mary Ann Bernard. While shooting Traffic, Soderbergh wanted a credit of "Photographed and Directed by". The Writer's Guild (WGA) wouldn't allow another credit ahead of the writer. Because Soderbergh didn't want his name used more than once, he adopted a pseudonym, Peter Andrews, his father's first and middle names.

A Warner Brothers film will have Soderbergh working with Matt Damon again. A true story, The Informant, will have Matt Damon playing the role of Mark Whitacre, a corporate whistleblower. Whitacre wore a wire for two and a half years for the FBI as a high-level executive at a Fortune 500 company, Archer Daniels Midland (ADM), in one of the largest price-fixing cases in history.[27] Filming is expected to commence on April 15, 2008. The script for the movie was written by Scott Z. Burns based on Kurt Eichenwald’s book, The Informant.

Production

Soderbergh often utilizes Cliff Martinez to construct/compose the soundtracks to his movies, and when not cutting his own films, he relies on editor Stephen Mirrione.

Aesthetics

Soderbergh has made big-budget Hollywood films as well as art-house independent films; works with above-the-title movie stars and unknowns; directs adaptations and original material, both of which written by himself as well as other screenwriters.[28] His versatility is also apparent with the genres which he chooses to film and his trades as a filmmaker behind the scenes. Traffic screenwriter and Syriana director Stephen Gaghan named Soderbergh "the Michael Jordan of filmmaking" for his ability to assume so many distinct roles in film production.[29]

His films are, in almost every instance, distinct in atmosphere and tone.[30] While Soderbergh is enamoured of dialogue, Soderbergh's incorporation of score and montage are equally prevalent in his story-telling.[31] Even Soderbergh's light-hearted affairs, such as Out of Sight and Ocean's 11, contain scenes where images and score are the dominant story-telling mechanisms. Films such as Solaris and Traffic are heavily layered in scenes absent of dialogue altogether. Cliff Martinez, a frequent collaborator with Soderbergh, composes many of the scores that provide Soderbergh with the thematic and sonic landscapes into which he inserts his characters.[28]

But while Soderbergh's subject matter is highly varied, many of his films feature as a central theme the exploration of the act or moral consequences of lying. For example, the protagonists in two early films, King of the Hill and sex, lies, and videotape, are both pathological liars (one in training, one in recovery), while most of the characters in both Oceans films are con artists. It is interesting to note that he directed Spalding Gray in Gray's Anatomy after King of the Hill, an actor who often commented that he was unable to "make anything up". Full Frontal is another film in this thread, where seemingly the fundamental dishonesty of the entire filmmaking process is exposed. More distantly, Soderbergh's interest in Cockney rhyming slang, as seen in The Limey and the Oceans films, may be seen as part of this theme, based on the conjectured origin of Cockney rhyming slang as a language game.

Some critics can make sense of Soderbergh's brave (albeit some times exasperating) folly into experimental filmmaking, others not so much. In his review of Full Frontal film critic Roger Ebert commented that, "Every once in a while, perhaps as an exercise in humility, Steven Soderbergh makes a truly inexplicable film... A film so amateurish that only the professionalism of some of the actors makes it watchable... It's the kind of film where you need the director telling you what he meant to do and what went wrong and how the actors screwed up and how there was no money for retakes, etc."[32] About Soderbergh's film, The Good German and his emphasis on style over substance, film critic Richard Roeper commented that the film had to offer, "a lot of style. Not so much with the plot."[33]

Soderbergh has, nonetheless, been dubbed a stylistic chameleon by Anne Thompson of Premiere Magazine. Drew Morton has extensively researched Soderbergh and has tied him to a modern movement much like the French New Wave.[34][35]

Quotes on Filmmaking

This is a good moment to comment on the cottage industry that has sprung up around "How To ..." Screenwriting manuals. I think of this because Towne's script, "Chinatown" is often cited as a great template (which it is) but, invariably, with no understanding or acknowledgment of the role "film editing" has in shaping a finished work.

So any discussion that omits this issue shows a palpable lack of experience in the actual making of films on the part of the scriptwriting teacher/author.

Personal life

Soderbergh is married to writer/journalist (and ex-E! Entertainment Television anchor) Jules Asner. Soderbergh often credits Asner for influencing his female characters.

Filmography

Director

Year Title No. of Oscar nominations No. of Oscar wins
1989 sex, lies, and videotape 1 0
1991 Kafka
1993 King of the Hill
1995 Underneath
1996 Gray's Anatomy
Schizopolis
1998 Out of Sight 2
1999 The Limey
2000 Erin Brockovich 5 1
Traffic 5 4
2001 Ocean's Eleven
2002 Full Frontal
Solaris
2004 Eros
(the segment "Equilibrium")
Ocean's Twelve
2005 Bubble
2006 The Good German 1
2007 Ocean's Thirteen
Life Interrupted
2008 The Argentine
Guerrilla
2009 The Informant
2009
(tentative)
The Girlfriend Experience

Screenwriter

Cinematographer

Editor

Producer

References

  1. ^ Steven Soderbergh Biography (1963-)
  2. ^ "Steven Soderbergh at Hollywood.com". Retrieved 2007-12-20.
  3. ^ "Biography of Steven Soderbergh". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 2007-12-19.
  4. ^ "Steven Soderbergh Biography - Yahoo! Movies". Retrieved 2007-12-19.
  5. ^ "allmovie ((( Steven Soderbergh > Biography )))". Retrieved 2007-12-19.
  6. ^ Mahadevan-Dasgupta, Uma (2003-07-18). "A filmmaker's celluloid feats". The Hindu.
  7. ^ Canby, Vincent (1989-05-27). "CRITIC'S NOTEBOOK; For the Cannes Winner, Untarnished Celebrity". New York Times.
  8. ^ Ebert, Roger (2006-01-27). "Reviews: Bubble".
  9. ^ "allmovie ((( Schizopolis > Overview )))". Retrieved 2007-12-19.
  10. ^ Dennis Lim (2001-01-03). "Both Sides Now. Having Your Way With Hollywood, or the Further Adventures of Steven Soderbergh".
  11. ^ "Steven Soderbergh Movie Box Office Results". Retrieved 2007-12-19.
  12. ^ "Guild's National Board elects Martha Coolidge first woman president of DGA" (Press release). Directors Guild of America. 2002-03-09.
  13. ^ Will Soderbergh's 'Bubble' Burst on Hollywood?. 2006-01-24. Retrieved 2007-12-19.
  14. ^ Anne Thompson (2006-03-17). "Distributors hold firm against day-and-date". The Hollywood Reporter.
  15. ^ Anne Thompson (2006-03-15). "Challenges Seen for Film Biz After 2005 Slide".
  16. ^ Gary Gentile (2006-01-18). "'Bubble' hits theaters, TV, DVD on same day". USA Today.
  17. ^ Rob Thomas (2006-03-17). "Independents' day smaller markets to get films on TV at the same time they hit the theaters". The Capital Times.
  18. ^ The Argentine (2008)
  19. ^ Guerrilla (2008)
  20. ^ Festival de Cannes : Film details 2008
  21. ^ indieWIRE: CANNES '08 NOTEBOOK | The Revolution By Night: Steven Soderbergh's "Che"
  22. ^ Original news release: David Sullivan, „Sasha Grey Stars in Steven Soderbergh Feature“, in: Adult Video News, AVN Media Network (online), 10-14-2008
  23. ^ David Sullivan, „Video: Soderbergh Directs Sasha Grey“, in: Adult Video News, AVN Media Network (online), 10-15-2008
  24. ^ Video of The Girlfriend Experience shoot at celebrities.com
  25. ^ „Soderbergh to make 3-D 'Cleopatra'“
  26. ^ Ellen A. Kim (2000-12-03). ""Traffic": Steven Soderbergh Interview". Hollywood.com.
  27. ^ "The Informant". Hollywood.com. Retrieved 2007-12-19.
  28. ^ a b Steven Soderbergh IMDB
  29. ^ Conversation About 'Traffic' - Screenwriter Stephen Gaghan talks about his new film, "Traffic" Charlie Rose (refers to Soderbergh as "Michael Jordan") December 27,200
  30. ^ Book: "Alternative Scriptwriting" By Ken Dancyger and Jeff Rush, p. 74
  31. ^ "The Limey" review by Jeff Vorndam (creative editing techniques and hand-held camerawork)
  32. ^ Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun Times 08/02/02 "Full Frontal"
  33. ^ Rotten Tomatoes reviews top critics "The Good German" Richard Roeper
  34. ^ Anne Thompson. "Steven Soderbergh: The Filmmaker Series". Retrieved 2007-12-19.
  35. ^ Drew Morton. "French New Wave Influences in Steven Soderbergh Films". Retrieved 2007-12-19.

External links

Awards and achievements
Preceded by Palme d'Or - Cannes Film Festival
1989
for Sex, Lies, and Videotape
Succeeded by
Preceded by Academy Award for Best Director
2000
for Traffic
Succeeded by

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