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Bosnian is incorrect, because it applies to all nations living in Bosnia. He is of Bosniak origin.
Cinéma C (talk | contribs)
Bosniak? He declares himself as a Serb. In fact, even if he *was* Bosniak, he says his origin is Serb, so in any case, he's only Serbian - period.
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'''Emir Nemanja Kusturica''', [[Ordre des Arts et des Lettres|OF]] ([[Serbian Cyrillic]]: Емир Немања Кустурица; {{IPA-sh|ˈkusturitsa|pron}} (born 24 November 1954 in [[Sarajevo]], [[SR Bosnia and Herzegovina]], [[SFR Yugoslavia]]) is a [[Serbs|Serbian]]<ref>[http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/film/article6204868.ece Movie-maker, musician, architect: Emir Kusturica is coming to London] "The Serbian movie-maker has built his own village and starred with the No Smoking Orchestra" by David Hutcheon, TIMES, May 2, 2009</ref><ref>[http://articles.latimes.com/2007/aug/13/world/fg-emir13 Finding roots in a reel Balkan village - Bosnian-born director Emir Kusturica builds a small town celebrating his embrace of a Serbian identity] by Tracy Wilkinson, August 13, 2007</ref><ref>[http://www.kustu.com/w2/en:biography Kustu.com - Official Web Site] Biography</ref> filmmaker, actor and musician of [[Bosniak]] origin, with a string of internationally acclaimed features.
'''Emir Nemanja Kusturica''', [[Ordre des Arts et des Lettres|OF]] ([[Serbian Cyrillic]]: Емир Немања Кустурица; {{IPA-sh|ˈkusturitsa|pron}} (born 24 November 1954 in [[Sarajevo]], [[SR Bosnia and Herzegovina]], [[SFR Yugoslavia]]) is a [[Serbs|Serbian]]<ref>[http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/film/article6204868.ece Movie-maker, musician, architect: Emir Kusturica is coming to London] "The Serbian movie-maker has built his own village and starred with the No Smoking Orchestra" by David Hutcheon, TIMES, May 2, 2009</ref><ref>[http://articles.latimes.com/2007/aug/13/world/fg-emir13 Finding roots in a reel Balkan village - Bosnian-born director Emir Kusturica builds a small town celebrating his embrace of a Serbian identity] by Tracy Wilkinson, August 13, 2007</ref><ref>[http://www.kustu.com/w2/en:biography Kustu.com - Official Web Site] Biography</ref> filmmaker, actor and musician with a string of internationally acclaimed features.


He won the [[Palme d'Or]] at [[Cannes Film Festival|Cannes]] twice (for ''[[When Father Was Away on Business]]'' and ''[[Underground (1995 film)|Underground]]''), and he is also a recipient of the [[France|French]] [[Ordre des Arts et des Lettres]].<ref>[http://www.politika.rs/detaljno.php?nid=19321 Politika]</ref><ref>[http://www.culture.gouv.fr/culture/actualites/index.htm Ministere de la culture]</ref> On 8 September 2007, Kusturica became a [[UNICEF]] National Ambassador for Serbia, alongside [[Ana Ivanović]], [[Jelena Janković]] and [[Aleksandar Đorđević]]. Kusturica resides in [[Drvengrad]], a village he had built for his film [[Life Is a Miracle]].
He won the [[Palme d'Or]] at [[Cannes Film Festival|Cannes]] twice (for ''[[When Father Was Away on Business]]'' and ''[[Underground (1995 film)|Underground]]''), and he is also a recipient of the [[France|French]] [[Ordre des Arts et des Lettres]].<ref>[http://www.politika.rs/detaljno.php?nid=19321 Politika]</ref><ref>[http://www.culture.gouv.fr/culture/actualites/index.htm Ministere de la culture]</ref> On 8 September 2007, Kusturica became a [[UNICEF]] National Ambassador for Serbia, alongside [[Ana Ivanović]], [[Jelena Janković]] and [[Aleksandar Đorđević]]. Kusturica resides in [[Drvengrad]], a village he had built for his film [[Life Is a Miracle]].

Revision as of 18:44, 3 March 2010

Emir Kusturica
Born
Emir Kusturica
Occupation(s)Film director and screenwriter
Years active1978-present
SpouseMaja Kusturica
AwardsGolden Lion for Best First Work
1981 Do You Remember Dolly Bell?
Golden Arena for Best Director
1985 When Father Was Away on Business
Cannes Palme d'Or
1985 When Father Was Away on Business
1995 Underground
Cannes Best Director Award
1989 Time of the Gypsies
Silver Bear for Best Director Jury Prize
1993 Arizona Dream

Emir Nemanja Kusturica, OF (Serbian Cyrillic: Емир Немања Кустурица; pronounced [ˈkusturitsa] (born 24 November 1954 in Sarajevo, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina, SFR Yugoslavia) is a Serbian[1][2][3] filmmaker, actor and musician with a string of internationally acclaimed features.

He won the Palme d'Or at Cannes twice (for When Father Was Away on Business and Underground), and he is also a recipient of the French Ordre des Arts et des Lettres.[4][5] On 8 September 2007, Kusturica became a UNICEF National Ambassador for Serbia, alongside Ana Ivanović, Jelena Janković and Aleksandar Đorđević. Kusturica resides in Drvengrad, a village he had built for his film Life Is a Miracle.

Life and work

Early period

Born to Murat Kusturica (journalist employed at SR Bosnia and Herzegovina Secretariat of Information) and Senka Numankadić (court secretary),[6] young Emir grew up as the only child in a family in a secular Bosnian Muslim family the Sarajevo neighbourhood of Gorica.[7]

After graduating from the Film Faculty of the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague (FAMU) in 1978, Kusturica began directing made-for-TV television shorts in former Yugoslavia. He made his feature film debut in 1981 with Do You Remember Dolly Bell?, which won the prestigious Golden Lion for Best First Work at that year's Venice Film Festival. From 1981 to 1988 he was a lecturer at the Academy of Performing Arts in Sarajevo (Akademija Scenskih Umjetnosti) and art director of Open Stage Obala (Otvorena scena Obala).

His second feature film, When Father Was Away on Business (1985), earned a Palme d'Or at Cannes and five Yugoslavian movie awards, as well as being nominated for an American Academy Award for Best Foreign Film. He wrote the screenplays for both Do You Remember Dolly Bell? and When Father Was Away on Business in collaboration with Abdulah Sidran. In 1989, Kusturica earned even more accolades for Time of the Gypsies, a film about gypsy culture and the exploitation of their youth.

1990s

Kusturica continued to make highly regarded films into the next decade, including his American debut, the absurdist comedy Arizona Dream (1993) and the Palme d'Or-winning black comedic epic, Underground (1995), based upon a scenario of Dušan Kovačević, famous Serbian playwright[8].

In 1998, he won the Venice Film Festival's Silver Lion for Best Direction for Black Cat, White Cat, a farcical comedy set in a Gypsy (Romany) settlement on the banks of the Danube. The music for the film was composed by the Belgrade-based band No Smoking Orchestra.

Recent life and work

He was President of the Jury of the 2005 Cannes Film Festival.

  • In 2007, Kusturica prepared a junk opera, Times of the Gypsies. The premiere took place in June 2007, at the Opéra Bastille in Paris.
  • In July 2007, Kusturica directed the accompanying music video to Manu Chao's single "Rainin In Paradize", from the latter's forthcoming album.
  • In mid-December 2007, Kusturica announced the formation of Kustendorf Film Festival.[1] Its first instalment will be held at Kusturica's village from 14 January to 21 January 2008.
  • Since January 2008, Kusturica annually organizes his own private Küstendorf Film Festival.

Acting

Kusturica made his first acting appearance in The Widow of St. Pierre 2000, a movie by director Patrice Leconte, although he had only a few lines. In 2002, Emir Kusturica appeared as an electric guitar player/security specialist in The Good Thief, directed by Neil Jordan. He is playing the role of KGB agent Vladimir Petrov in the movie Farewell by french director Christian Caron.

Music

Performing with No Smoking Orchestra in March 2009.

In 1986-1988, Kusturica played bass guitar in Zabranjeno Pušenje, a rock band from Zenica (SR Bosnia and Herzegovina).

Although Kusturica played a minor musical role in the band, it changed its name to 'Emir Kusturica & No Smoking Orchestra'. In 1999, the No Smoking Orchestra recorded a new album, Unza Unza Time, produced by the Universal record company, as well as a music video, directed by Emir Kusturica. The band has toured internationally.

The musician and composer Goran Bregović also created music for several Kusturica's films, including Time of the Gypsies, Arizona Dream, which featured Iggy Pop, and Underground.

Controversy

Work

Kusturica as well as his work remains controversial at home and abroad.[10] Underground, scripted by Dušan Kovačević, was partly financed by state-owned Serbian television and created controversy. The film detailed the history of Yugoslavia from the beginning of the second World War until the conflict in the 1990s. Some critics claimed Kusturica propagated a pro-Serbian view of the Yugoslav Wars including animosities during WWII.[11] Some intellectuals claimed the film contained pro-Serb propaganda.[12][13]

French philosopher and writer Alain Finkielkraut denounced the Cannes Film Festival's jury saying that "In recognizing Underground, the Cannes jury thought it was honouring a creator with a thriving imagination. In fact, it has honoured a servile and flashy illustrator of criminal clichés. The Cannes jury highly praised a version of the most hackneyed and deceitful Serb propaganda. The devil himself could not have conceived so cruel an outrage against Bosnia, nor such a grotesque epilogue to Western incompetence and frivolity."[13][14] French philosopher Bernard-Henri Levy made a film criticizing Underground.[12]

The Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Žižek said that "I hope we share another point, which is - to be brutal - hatred of [director] Emir Kusturica. 'Underground' is one of the most horrible films that I've seen. What kind of Yugoslav society do you see in Kusturica's Underground? A society where people fornicate, drink, fight - a kind of eternal orgy."[15]

For the novelist Aleksandar Hemon, who was born in Bosnia and moved to the United States before the war, Underground downplays Serbian atrocities by presenting "the Balkan war as a product of collective, innate, savage madness."[16]

Politics

Kusturica has been criticised for going along with Slobodan Milosevic’s propaganda during the Bosnian War. Andrej Nikolaidis, a Montenegrin writer, stated: "Considering he proclaimed his dead father a Serb, and himself, Emir, an Orthodox Christian, he easily chose his own in the Bosnian War. He recognized them in Radovan Karadzic and Ratko Mladic. He wasn't there to fire cannon barrages, but whenever he could, with his artistic and media get-up he provided them an alibi for every killed Muslim who didn't want to admit that he was originally an 'Orthodox Christian'." The journalist supported his claims by quoting Kusturica's numerous pro-Milosevic public statements as well as with photos showing Kusturica hugging Jovica Stanišić (chief of Serbian State Security Service, today tried for war crimes in the Hague), Milorad Vučelić (director of Serbian television ) and Zoran Lilić (at the time president of Yugoslavia).[10] Kusturica sued Nikolaidis and the Monitor newspaper for damage to his reputation at the Supreme Court of Montenegro, resulting in them being fined 12,000 euros for breaking the codex of journalism by calling him stupid, ugly and corrupt in the article.[17] The trial provoked a petition organized by the Bosnian Writers Association, calling for the recall of the verdict, because they felt it denied basic human rights (of free speech), as they feel that Nikolaidis was merely publicly saying what everybody who lived in Balkans during the nineties already knew, i.e., that there had been collaboration between Emir Kusturica and the regime of Slobodan Milošević. The petition was supported and signed by prominent intellectuals and many students from former Yugoslavia and abroad.[10]

Personal

Mayor of Guadalajara Alfonso Petersen offering Kusturica the keys to the city at Telmex Auditorium in March 2009

On Đurđevdan (St. George's Day) in 2005 Emir was baptised into the Serbian Orthodox Church as Nemanja Kusturica (Немања Кустурица) in Savina monastery near Herceg Novi, Montenegro.[18][19] To his critics who considered this the final betrayal of his Bosnian Muslim roots, he replied that: "My father was an atheist and he always described himself as a Serb. OK, maybe we were Muslim for 250 years, but we were Orthodox before that and deep down we were always Serbs, religion cannot change that. We only became Muslims to survive the Turks."[18][20]

At the 2007 parliamentary elections he gave indirect support to Prime Minister Vojislav Koštunica and his center-right Democratic Party of Serbia.[21] In 2007, he also supported Serbian campaign Solidarity - Kosovo is Serbia, a campaign against the unilateral separation of Serbian province of Kosovo.[22]

He is currently living in Drvengrad, Serbia, the village he had built for his film Life Is a Miracle.

Kusturica holds Serbian and French citizenships.

Emir Kusturica is married to Maja Kusturica with whom he has two children, Stribor, 29, and Dunja, 21.[23]

Filmography

Awards

References

  • Gocic, Goran: "The Cinema of Emir Kusturica: Notes from the Underground", Wallflower Press, London, 2001.
  • Irodanova, Dina: Emir Kusturica. London. British Film Institute 2002.
  • Imsirevic, Almir: "Based on a Truth Story", Sarajevo, 2007.
  1. ^ Movie-maker, musician, architect: Emir Kusturica is coming to London "The Serbian movie-maker has built his own village and starred with the No Smoking Orchestra" by David Hutcheon, TIMES, May 2, 2009
  2. ^ Finding roots in a reel Balkan village - Bosnian-born director Emir Kusturica builds a small town celebrating his embrace of a Serbian identity by Tracy Wilkinson, August 13, 2007
  3. ^ Kustu.com - Official Web Site Biography
  4. ^ Politika
  5. ^ Ministere de la culture
  6. ^ INTERVIEW: EMIR NEMANJA KUSTURICA, Globus, February 2009
  7. ^ http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/08/magazine/08EMIR.html?_r=1
  8. ^ http://www.kustu.com/w2/en:biography
  9. ^ "Festival de Cannes: Promise Me This". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-12-20.
  10. ^ a b c http://www.experiencefestival.com/a/Emir_Kusturica_-_Controversy/id/5020343
  11. ^ http://www.experiencefestival.com/a/Emir_Kusturica_-_Life_and_work/id/5020342
  12. ^ a b http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2004/may/15/film.cannes20041 Serb director tries for third triumph
  13. ^ a b http://www.nytimes.com/1995/12/05/movies/dispute-leads-bosnian-to-quit-films.html Dispute Leads Bosnian to Quit Films
  14. ^ L'imposture Kusturica - Le Monde, 2 June 1995
  15. ^ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EzM8tqjmCU8 Euronews: Slavoj Žižek interview
  16. ^ http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/08/magazine/08EMIR.html?pagewanted=2&_r=1
  17. ^ http://www.blic.rs/hronika.php?id=110061
  18. ^ a b Article about Kusturica's religion on pionirovglasnik.com
  19. ^ News of Kusturica's baptism on passagen.se
  20. ^ An interview for Guardian
  21. ^ (Reuters) - Film director Emir Kusturica attends the final pre-elections rally of Democratic Party of Serbia in Belgrade 17 January 2007.
  22. ^ Radio Slobodna Evropa article
  23. ^ http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/08/magazine/08EMIR.html
  24. ^ "Festival de Cannes: Time of the Gypsies". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-08-01.
  25. ^ "Festival de Cannes: Underground". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-09-05.

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