André Téchiné
André Téchiné | |
---|---|
Born | |
Nationality | French |
Occupation | Filmmaker |
Years active | 1966–present |
Awards | Best Director Award (Cannes Film Festival) 1985 Rendez-vous |
André Téchiné (French: [teʃine]; born 13 March 1943) is a French screenwriter and film director. He has a long and distinguished career that places him among the most accomplished post-New Wave French film directors.
Téchiné belongs to a second generation of French film critics associated with Cahiers du cinéma who followed François Truffaut, Claude Chabrol, Jean-Luc Godard and others from criticism into filmmaking. He is noted for his elegant and emotionally charged films that often delve into the complexities of emotions and the human condition.
One of Téchiné's trademarks is the lyrical examination of human relations in a sensitive but unsentimental way, as can be seen in his most acclaimed films: My Favorite Season (1993) and Wild Reeds (1994).
Life
André Téchiné was born on 13 March 1943 at Valence-d'Agen, a small town in the Midi-Pyrénées region, department of Tarn-et-Garonne, France.[1] His family, of Spanish ancestry, owned a small agricultural equipment business.[1] He grew up in the southwest French countryside and in his adolescence acquired a passion for film. From 1952 to 1959 he went to a Catholic boarding school in Montauban.[1] He was allowed to leave only on Sunday afternoons, when he would go to the cinema, although he often had to return before the screening ended. In 1959 he transferred to a secular state school, which exposed him to a different culture, with Marxist teachers, a film club and a film magazine, La Plume et l'écran, to which he contributed.[1] "Films were my only opening to the world,"[2] Téchiné has said. "They were my only possibility of escaping my family environment and my boarding school. It was probably dangerous because, through movies, I learned how the world works and how human relations work. But it was magical, and I was determined to follow the thread of that magic."[2]
At nineteen he moved to Paris to pursue filmmaking.[1] He failed the entrance examination at France's most prominent film school,[1] but started to write reviews for Cahiers du cinéma, where he worked for four years (1964–1967).[1] His first article was about Truffaut's The Soft Skin, published in July 1964.[1]
Téchiné's first filmmaking experience emerged from a theatrical milieu.[3] He went on to become assistant director for Marc'O in Les Idoles (1967), a film version of an experimental play.[3] This film was edited by Jean Eustache; Téchiné has an uncredited walk-on appearance in Eustache's film La Maman et la putain (1972).[4] Téchiné was also assistant director to Jacques Rivette (his editor at Cahiers du Cinema) on L'amour fou (1969).[5]
Téchiné is noted for his elegant and emotionally charged films that often delve into the complexities of human condition and emotions. An intimist flavor pervades his work. One of Téchiné's trademarks is the lyrical examination of human relations in a sensitive but unsentimental way. Influenced by Roland Barthes, Bertolt Brecht, Ingmar Bergman, William Faulkner and the cinematic French New Wave, Téchiné's originality lies in his subtle exploration of sexuality and national identity, as he challenges expectations in his depictions of gay relations, the North African dimensions of contemporary French culture, and the center-periphery relationship between Paris and his native Southwest.[6] Shy and ascetic-looking, Téchiné does not opine on political issues and rarely appears on television.[2] Fear of flying prevents him from attending most film openings or festivals more than a train ride from his Paris apartment overlooking the Luxembourg Garden.[2]
"I never know how each film will end," Téchiné has said. "When I'm filming, I shoot each scene as if it were a short film. It's only when I edit that I worry about the narrative. My objective is to tell a story, but that's the final thing I do."[2]
Film career
Paulina s'en va (1969)
André Téchiné made his debut as director with Paulina s'en va (Paulina is Leaving) (1969), in which the title character drifts aimlessly, struggling to find a way out of her disenchantment and find her calling in life. Initially conceived as a short, the film was shot in two periods, over one week in 1967 and two weeks in 1969.[4] Shown at that year's Venice Film Festival,[4] it disconcerted audiences and was not released until 1975. In the meantime, Téchiné experimented with references to different genres and auteurs while providing screenplays for other directors, including Liliane de Kermadec's Aloïse.
Souvenirs d'en France (1974)
After working in television and theater,[7] Téchiné first came to prominence with his second film, Souvenirs d'en France (French Provincial) (1974), a mix of black comedy, romantic drama and nostalgia with a distinctly Brechtian tone. The film was inspired by Orson Welles’s The Magnificent Ambersons and filmed in Téchiné's native village. It is a highly compressed history of a small-town family from early in the century through the Resistance and on to May 1968. Téchiné explored the relationship between the grand scope of life and more personal histories.[8] The film stars Jeanne Moreau; Téchiné's work has since been distinguished by key roles for respected actresses.[8]
Barocco (1976)
Téchiné demonstrated his flair for richly textured, atmospheric storytelling with his next film, the aptly titled thriller Barocco (1976), a crime drama, rooted in expressionist surrealism. A boxer who accepted and then turned down a huge bribe from a politician to tell a lie that would influence an election is killed by a hired assassin. The boxer's girlfriend eventually falls in love with the killer while trying to remake him into the image of her slain lover. The film elicited critical plaudits for its elegant look.[8]
Les sœurs Brontë (1979)
Three years later, Téchiné took on biography with Les sœurs Brontë The Bronte Sisters (1979), a profile of the Brontë sisters. The film's heavy, repressive mood evokes the harshness and injustice of the life the sisters endured. The passion and color that is so vivid in their novels was absent from their daily existence, and the film's gloomy cinematography—using dreary earth colors to emphasize the cold, remote feel—evokes this. The film features an all-star cast: Isabelle Adjani, Marie-France Pisier and Isabelle Huppert as Emily, Charlotte and Anne Brontë, and Pascal Gregory as their ill-fated brother Branwell.
Hôtel des Amériques (1981)
Hôtel des Amériques (1981), set in Biarritz, explores the strained relationship between a successful middle-aged woman and an unfulfilled and emotionally unbalanced man in a story of hopelessly ill-matched love. This film marked a turning point in Téchiné's career, anchoring his work in a more realistic universe than the previous romantic one. For the first time Téchiné let his actors improvise, a practice he has continued ever since, adjusting his scripts to accommodate the new material. “From Hôtel des Amériques onwards my films are no longer genre films,”[9] he said. “My inspiration is no longer drawn from the cinema”.[9] This film also started a long productive collaboration with Catherine Deneuve. "There are some directors who are more feminine than others, like Téchiné, like Truffaut. They are an exceptional gift to actresses," Deneuve has said.
Rendez-vous (1985)
After making the television production La Matiouette ou l'arrière-pays (1983), Téchiné returned to critical attention with Rendez-vous (1985), a sexy noir melodrama replete with the seductive surface of the era.[8] In the film a would-be actress, Nina, fleeing her provincial home for Paris, enters a turbulent love relationship with a sadistic, self-destructive young actor who caused the death of his former girlfriend. When the actor himself is killed in an accident, or possible suicide, his former mentor/director, and father of the dead girlfriend, determines to cast the inexperienced Nina as the female lead in 'Romeo and Juliet', a role his deceased daughter played. The film is ultimately a vehicle for exploring the violent intensity of certain emotional attachments and their ability to cause one's life to spin off in unexpected directions. By now a major director of the post-New Wave, Téchiné won the Cannes Festival Best Direction Award while helping launch the career of Juliette Binoche.[8]
Le lieu du crime (1986)
Le lieu du crime (1986) (Scene of the Crime) begins with a shot right out of the opening of Great Expectations. In the rustic vicinity of a small provincial town, a young boy helps an escaped criminal. The highly troubled youth, disaffected by his parents' divorce, lives with his mother and grandparents while the father lives nearby. The escaped convict commits murder to save the boy from harm but gets involved with the mother. By the time the boy is to have his first communion, the mother—trapped in a humdrum existence—has fallen in love with the convict and wants to run away with him.
Les innocents (1987)
In Téchiné's next film, Les Innocents (1987), a young woman, born and raised in Northern France, is visiting the Mediterranean city of Toulon for the first time. She is prompted by two events: the wedding of her sister, and the disappearance of her brother, a deaf-mute who supports himself as a pickpocket under the tutelage of a young Arab and an older bisexual married man with a weakness for young Arabs. The girl meets them and finds herself attracted to the young Arab and the older man's son, who is bisexual like his father. She is soon torn between the two in a romantic and sexual dilemma that mirrors France's political turmoil over its growing Arab population.
J'embrasse pas (1991)
J'embrasse pas (I don't kiss) (1991) is a bleak, melancholic portrait of a young man searching and failing to find meaning in his life. An idealistic 17-year-old leaves his home in the rural southwest of France, hoping to make a career as an actor in Paris. After an auspicious start, he soon discovers that he has no talent as an actor and loses both his job and his room. In the end, he has to make a living as a male prostitute. He falls in love with a young prostitute, but the relationship has terrible consequences for him.
My Favorite Season (1993)
My Favorite Season (Ma saison préférée) (1993) is a dark and somber story of middle-aged estranged siblings, a provincial lawyer (sister) and a surgeon (brother). They have begun to come to terms with what they have become professionally and personally when their aging mother begins to decline after a stroke. Téchiné has called Ma Saison Préférée a film "about individuality and the coldness of the modern world." It earned acclaim when it was screened in competition at the 1993 Cannes Film Festival.[10]
Wild Reeds (1994)
The following year, Téchiné had his greatest success to date with Wild Reeds (Les roseaux sauvages) (1994). The film was commissioned by French television as one of part of a series of eight films entitled Tous les garçons et les filles de leur âge, although it was shown first at cinemas. This is a bucolic tale of teenage self-discovery centered on the inner turmoil of four teenagers staying at a boarding school in Aquitaine in 1962, their political and sexual awakening with the effect of the Algerian War as backdrop. The director, inspired by his own adolescence, delivers a limpid and sensual work, bathed by the light of southwest France. Téchiné works with certain sets of themes including family bonds, homosexuality, and exile. Wild Reeds is his most autobiographical movie; like the teen-age Téchiné, the main character, François, attends an all-male boarding school.[2] While part of the story revolves around François's discovery that he is gay, Téchiné said his principal interest was to evoke how the Algerian war of independence was felt in a rural corner of France."If I hadn't been able to inject this, if I had only been making a film about adolescent coming of age, it wouldn't have interested me at all," he explained.[2]
Wild Reeds was a hit at the 1994 César award ceremony, winning four out of eight nominations (best film, best director, best script, and best newcomer for Élodie Bouchez).[11] It also won the Prix Delluc in 1994. This was Téchiné's sixth film released in the USA (in 1995—following French Provincial (Souvenirs d'en France), Barocco, Hôtel des Amériques, Rendez-vous and Scene of the Crime) and his most autobiographical picture to date. Wild Reeds won the New York Film Critics Award and National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Foreign Language Film.
Les voleurs (1996)
Further acclaim greeted the director in 1996 with Les voleurs (Thieves) (1996), an ambitious and complex crime drama. The film jumps through time and switches narrative perspectives in a Rashomon-style exploring family and amorous ties. It postulates a fatalistic world bound by family origins and intense romantic longings in which every character is trapped into becoming a thief of one kind or another, emotionally as well as existentially. This film earned Téchiné nominations for the César and Golden Palme at Cannes, as well as a host of other honors.
Alice et Martin (1998)
Téchiné followed this success with Alice et Martin (Alice and Martin) (1998), a haunting love story between two emotionally damaged outsiders that marked his reunion with Juliette Binoche.[8] As in his earlier film Les Voleurs, Téchiné told the story out of sequence.
Loin (2001)
Loin (Far) (2001) was shot on digital video. Employing natural light for the most part, it uses a slightly degraded video image to create a sense of collapse and unease. The film is set in Tangier and is told in three "movements", with the sections marked by chapters. The plot turns around three characters: a truck driver importing goods between Morocco and France tempted to cross the strait to Spain smuggling drugs; his young Arab friend desperate to go to Europe; and the driver's Jewish ex-girlfriend who is hesitant about her future migration to Canada. During the three days they are together, fateful decisions must be made.
Strayed (2003)
After two less successful but still ravishing efforts, André Téchiné received acclaim with Strayed (Les égarés) (2003), an adaptation of the novel Le Garçon aux yeux gris, by Gilles Perrault. While Téchiné usually braids together several intersecting stories, this wartime drama traces a single linear tale with only four characters. In 1940, an attractive widow flees Nazi-occupied Paris for the South with her small daughter and teenage son; they are soon joined by a mysterious young man. The foursome find refuge from the war in an abandoned house.
Changing Times (2004)
Changing Times (Les temps qui changent) (2004) is a warmhearted exploration of cultural collision in contemporary Morocco, oscillating between two worlds and two ideas about the meaning of experience and the enduring power of love. A middle age construction supervisor comes to Tangier to search for the love of his youth, lost many years ago. She is now married and with a grown up son. They eventually cross paths in a supermarket. Téchiné weaves together a half dozen subplots, creating a set of variations on the theme of divided sensibilities tugging one another into states of perpetual unrest and possible happiness.
Les Témoins (2007)
Les Témoins (The Witnesses) deals with a group of friends and lovers confronting the AIDS epidemic in the 1980s. Mehdi, a French-Arab vice cop, is in an open marriage with Sarah, a writer of children's books who finds herself unable to bond with her newborn child. Sarah's best friend, Adrien, a middle-aged doctor, is infatuated with Manu, a narcissistic young man, who has recently arrived in Paris from the South. There is also the story line of Julie, Manu's opera singer sister, and Sandra, Manu's hooker friend. The film is filled with color, life, and emotion until the AIDS epidemic disrupts the characters' lives. Les Témoins received wide critical acclaim and brought Téchiné a level of international attention he had not received since the success of his films Wild Reeds and Les Voleurs.
The Girl on the Train (2009)
The Girl on the Train (La fille du RER), centers on a naive girl who fabricates a story about being attacked on a suburban Paris train by black and Arab youths who supposedly mistook her for a Jew. The story is based on a real event that took place in France in 2004. Téchiné dissects the psychological circumstances and consequences surrounding this bold lie in a rich drama. The director worked, in part, from Jean Marie Besset's play about the scandal, RER, as well as from news reports and court records. "The story became the mirror of all French fears", Téchiné commented, "a revelation of what we call the 'collective unconscious.' How an individual's lie is transformed into truth with respect to the community at large and its fears. It's a truly fascinating subject."
Impardonnables (2011)
Set in Venice and adapted from a Philippe Djian's novel, Unforgivable (Impardonnables) follows Francis, an aging successful writer of crime novels, married to a much younger ex-model. While suffering from writer's block, he hires his wife's ex-lesbian lover to investigate the disappearance of his adult daughter from a previous marriage who had eloped while visiting Venice. As his marriage begins to crumble, Francis pays the detective's troubled son to secretly follow his wife's daily whereabouts. The film is populated by characters and, as it is usual in his films, Téchiné is more interested in observing them closely rather than be driven by the plot.
In the Name of My Daughter (2014)
Like The Girl on the Train, In the Name of My Daughter (L'Homme que l'on aimait trop), is a fictionalized account of true events. In this case, the before and aftermath of the disappearance of a casino heiress, Agnès Le Roux, in 1977. The plot mixes amour fou, mafia wars, dysfunctional mother-daughter relationship and courtroom drama. The world of the French Riviera's casinos and the mafia wars in the 1970s are the background in this retelling of a case that made headlines in France.
The film, based on the memoir Une femme face à la Mafia written by Agnès Le Roux's mother and brother, marked the 7th collaboration between André Téchiné and his favorite actress Catherine Deneuve.
Filmography
Year | English title | Original title | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1969 | Paulina is Leaving | Paulina s'en va | Original Script. |
1975 | French Provincial | Souvenirs d'en France | Original Script. |
1976 | Barocco | Barocco |
|
1979 | The Bronte Sisters | Les sœurs Brontë | |
1981 | Hotel America | Hôtel des Amériques | |
1983 | La matiouette ou l'arrière-pays | La matiouette | |
1985 | Rendez-vous | Rendez-vous |
|
1986 | The Scene of the Crime | Le lieu du crime | |
1987 | The Innocents | Les Innocents |
|
1991 | I Don’t Kiss | J'embrasse pas |
|
1993 | My Favorite Season | Ma saison préférée | Original Script
|
1994 | Wild Reeds | Les roseaux sauvages | Original Script
|
1996 | Thieves | Les voleurs | Original Script |
1998 | Alice and Martin | Alice et Martin | Original Script |
2001 | Far | Loin | Original Script. |
2003 | Strayed | Les égarés | Loosely based on Gilles Perrault's novel The Boy With Grey Eyes |
2004 | Changing Times | Les temps qui changent | Original Script. |
2007 | The Witnesses | Les Témoins | Original Script
|
2009 | The Girl on the Train | La fille du RER | Loosely based on Jean-Marie Besset's 2006 play RER |
2011 | Impardonnables | Unforgivable | Based on Philippe Djian’s novel Unforgivable |
2014 | In the Name of My Daughter | L'Homme que l'on aimait trop | |
2016 | Being 17 | Quand on a 17 ans | Nominated—Berlin International Film Festival - Golden Bear |
2017 | Golden Years | Nos années folles | |
2019 | Farewell to the Night | L'Adieu à la nuit |
Frequent casting
Actor | Paulina is Leaving (1969) |
French Provincial (1975) |
Barocco (1976) |
The Bronte Sisters (1979) |
Hotel America (1981) |
Rendez-vous (1985) |
The Scene of the Crime (1986) |
The Innocents (1987) |
I Don't Kiss (1991) |
My Favorite Season (1993) |
Wild Reeds (1994) |
Thieves (1996) |
Alice and Martin (1998) |
Far (2001) |
Strayed (2003) |
Changing Times (2004) |
The Witnesses (2007) |
The Girl on the Train (2009) |
Impardonnables (2011) |
In the Name of My Daughter (2014) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Isabelle Adjani | ||||||||||||||||||||
Michel Blanc | ||||||||||||||||||||
Emmanuelle Béart | ||||||||||||||||||||
Juliette Binoche | ||||||||||||||||||||
Catherine Deneuve | ||||||||||||||||||||
Alexis Loret | ||||||||||||||||||||
Gaël Morel | ||||||||||||||||||||
Jacques Nolot | ||||||||||||||||||||
Marie-France Pisier | ||||||||||||||||||||
Stéphane Rideau | ||||||||||||||||||||
Marthe Villalonga |
Notes
- ^ a b c d e f g h Marshall, André Téchiné, p. 2
- ^ a b c d e f g Riding, Finding Cinematic Gold, New York Times, December 29, 1996.
- ^ a b Marshall, André Téchiné, p. 4
- ^ a b c Marshall, André Téchiné, p. 5
- ^ Marshall, André Téchiné, p. 3
- ^ Marshall, André Téchiné, p. back cover
- ^ Armstrong et al., The Rough Guide to Film, p. 551
- ^ a b c d e f Armstrong et al., The Rough Guide to Film, p. 552
- ^ a b Philippon, André Téchiné, p. 121
- ^ "Festival de Cannes: My Favorite Season". festival-cannes.com. Archived from the original on 2009-10-03. Retrieved 2009-08-22.
- ^ Marshall, André Téchiné, p. 81
References
- Armstrong, Richard; Charity, Tom; Hughes, Lloyd; Winter, Jessica. The Rough Guide to Film, Rough Guides. ISBN 978-1-84353-408-2
- Jones, Kent. André Téchine. La Estrastegia de la Tension, 42 Semana Internacional de Cine, Valladolid ISBN 84-87737-23-4
- Kael, Pauline. "Lion-Hearted Women", Review of French Provincial (Souvenirs d'en France), The New Yorker, March 1, 1976, also in book When the Lights Go Down
- Marshall, Bill. André Téchiné, Manchester University Press, 2007, ISBN 0-7190-5831-7
- Milicia, Joseph. Téchiné, André in International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers.Vol. 2: Directors. St. James Press, 2001. ISBN 1-55862-477-5
- Rees-Roberts, Nick, French Queer Cinema, Edinburgh University Press, 2008, ISBN 0-7486-3418-5
- Gale Reference Team, "André Téchiné", Contemporary Authors, Gale-Thomson
- Philippon, Alain, André Téchiné, Difussion Seuil,1988, ISBN 2-86642-066-7
- Riding, Alan. Finding Cinematic Gold in the Dysfunctional Family, The New York Times, December 29, 1996
- White, Armond. "Strange Gifts: Andre Techine Remakes the Melodrama," Film Comment, July/August 1995
External links
- 1943 births
- Living people
- People from Tarn-et-Garonne
- French film directors
- French people of Spanish descent
- French male screenwriters
- French screenwriters
- Cannes Film Festival Award for Best Director winners
- Best Director César Award winners
- LGBT directors
- LGBT people from France
- Chevaliers of the Légion d'honneur