Biography: life and films
If there is one film director working in France today who can convince us
that the auteur tradition is still alive and flourishing it is Abdellatif
Kechiche. Between 2000 and 2013 he has made only five full-length films,
but each of these has been critically acclaimed and some have achieved considerable
success at the box office. Kechiche's approach to filmmaking is very
much in the style of previous revered auteurs like Maurice Pialat - low-key
naturalistic dramas made on the tightest of budgets, usually with unknown
or inexperienced actors. Despite the recent furore in the French media concerning
his allegedly brutal working methods, Kechiche remains a highly respected
film director, willing to tackle difficult subjects such as illegal immigration,
social exclusion and lesbianism with unwavering honesty and humanity.
Kechiche was born on 7th December 1960 in Tunis, Tunisia, but grew up in
France after his parents, working class immigrants, settled in Nice when
he was 6 years old. He developed a passion for the theatre at an early
age and, after studying drama at the Antibes Conservatoire, he began acting
on stage in various productions on the Côte d'Azur, including: Eduardo
Manet's
Un balcon sur les Andes (1979), Paul Claudel's
L'Échange
(1982) and Alexandre Dumas's
Monte Cristo (1987). He had his
first screen role, playing the lead (a young Algerian immigrant), in Abdelkrim
Bahloul's
Thé à la menthe (1984). André
Téchiné then gave him a notable part in
Les Innocents (1987),
playing alongside Sandrine Bonnaire. Five years later, Kechiche met
his future partner Ghalya Lacroix, who would work on the films he subsequently
directed, as screenwriter and editor.
The fate of illegal immigrants in present day France was the subject of the
first film that Kechiche directed in 2000,
Faute à Voltaire.
Starring Sami Bouajila and Élodie Bouchez, this authentic slice of
life won its director critical acclaim and received two awards at the Venice
Film Festival in 2001. After this promising debut, Abdellatif Kechiche
had his first major success with
L'Esquive
(2003), a low budget film following a class of underprivileged adolescents
from immigrant families in the Paris suburbs as they rehearse a Marivaux
play. Not only was the film a hit with audiences and critics, it scooped
four awards at the 2005 Césars ceremony, including those for Best
Film, Best Director and Best Screenplay.
L'Esquive's striking
naturalism and fierce engagement with today's pressing social concerns led
Kechiche to be likened to the British filmmaker Ken Loach.
Kechiche's next film was
La
Graine et le mulet (2007), a heartwarming drama about a North African
immigrant shipyard worker who dreams of opening a restaurant in the town
of Sète. Again, the film impressed the critics with its humanity
and authentic depiction of life on the margins, the harshness of the subject
matter softened by a subtle poetry that is unique to the film's director.
The film's accolades not only repeated Kechiche's tally of Césars
(again he took the Best Director, Best Film and Best Screenplay prizes),
these also included the Special Jury Prize at the 2007 Venice Film Festival
and the Louis-Delluc for 2007.
With
Vénus noire, Kechiche
made his first foray into period drama, one about a freak show exhibit of
the 19th century. Running to over two and half hours in length, the
film proved to be a monumental flop (it only attracted 200 thousand spectators
in France) and critical reaction was fairly mixed. The film's failure
resulted in a spectacular falling out between the director and his producer,
Marin Karmitz of MK2. After this setback, it would be three years before
Kechiche completed his next film, but it would turn out to be another winner.
Adapted from Julie Maroh's graphic novel
Le Bleu est une couleur chaude,
La Vie d'Adèle (2013)
won praise throughout the world for its frank and brutal depiction of a lesbian
love affair between two young women from different social backgrounds.
Although the film was a commercial and critical success, it provoked controversy
when one of its lead actresses spoke out in condemnation of the director's
abusive treatment of her and her co-star. Kechiche put up a fierce
defence and the film went on to attract an audience of over a million in
France. It won its director his second Louis-Delluc prize, and also
the Palme d'or at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival (shared with his two
lead actresses). The film was also nominated for eight Césars,
but, possibly owing to the bad press it attracted, it received only one award
- in the Most Promising Actress category for Adèle Exarchopoulos.
© James Travers 2017
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