Biography: life and films
Benoît Jacquot was born in Paris on 5th February 1947. He
began his career at the age of 17 by working as an assistant to the
director Bernard Borderie on the popular
Angélique series of
films in the mid-1960s. He subsequently worked as an assistant
for Marguerite Duras on
Nathalie
Granger (1972) and
India Song (1975). He
made his directing debut with
L'Assassin
musicien (1976), a Dostoevsky adaptation that appeared to be
strongly influenced by Robert Bresson. Critical reaction to this
and Jacquot's next few films was mixed and he was on the point of
giving up filmmaking when a 15 year-old ingénue, Judith
Godrèche, suddenly entered his life.
With Godrèche in the lead role,
La
Désenchantée (1990) marked a significant
turning point for Jacquot. It was the first of the kind of film
for which he is now best known, intimate realist portraits of
rebellious or unsettled women who seek to escape from their present
circumstances. Jacquot's next muse would be Virginie Ledoyen in
La
Fille seule (1995), a real time drama that
employs long takes as it follows the central
protagonist through her day as a busy hotel maid.
The critics responded enthusiastically to this unusual but compelling film and
Jacquot soon came to be regarded as one of France's most promising
auteur filmmakers.
Benoît Jacquot's style of cinema is often characterised as
austere, realist and intimate, but the director has also shown a flair
for experimentation.
La Fille
seule is an exemplary attempt at a 'continuous action' film;
La Fausse Suivante (2000) is
the ultimate in minimalist cinema, a film staged and directed as a
piece of theatre;
Tosca (2001) is no more than a
filmed opera;
À tout de suite (2004)
was boldly filmed
à la
Nouvelle Vague, in grainy black and white. As well as a
fair number of modest productions, Jacquot has directed several big
budget films with big name actors. The latter include two
impressive period dramas:
Sade
(2000), starring Daniel Auteuil, and
Les Adieux à la reine
(2011), which received the Prix Louis Delluc and was nominated for ten
Césars, winning awards for its cinematography, set and costume
design.
With an impressive body of work under his belt (including some notable
television and stage work), Benoît Jacquot is one of France's
most committed and creative auteur filmmakers. Isabelle Huppert
is the actress Jacquot has worked with most often (five times so far),
their most successful collaborations being
L'École de la chair
(1998) and
Villa Amalia (2009). The
other leading French actresses to grace his films include: Isabelle
Adjani (
Adolphe), Sandrine Kiberlain (
Le
Septième Ciel) and Isild Le Besco (
À tout de suite).
Whilst some of Jacquot's films are challenging and occasionally
provocative,
they invariably resound with truth and are honest, sincerely meant
reflections on the human condition, carried by remarkable performances
from some talented actors.
© James Travers 2013
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