Biography: life and films
In the past two and half decades, Claire Denis has made barely a dozen
full-length films, including a number of documentaries. Whilst
she may not be the most prolific of film directors, much of her work is
highly regarded and she is internationally renowned as one of France's
leading auteur filmmakers. Her cinema has a striking personal
touch and reflects her deeply rooted preoccupation with estrangement
and the need to identify with the outsider. Denis's films usually
revolve around immigrants or social outcasts and are distinguished as
much by their sensual composition as by their stark realism.
Whilst there is a social realist component to some of her work, Claire
Denis tends to avoid making strident political statements in her
films. Instead, she appeals to our humanity and asks that we may
feel something for those who find themselves swept to the margins,
excluded from the main stratum of the society in which they live.
Claire Denis was born on 21st April 1948, in Paris, France. The
daughter of a government official, she grew up in French colonial
Africa and spent most of her childhood in Cameroon, Burkina Faso and
Djibouti. Ill health in early adolescence took her back to
France, where she soon developed a keen interest in books and
cinema. At the suggestion of her husband, a photographer, she
enrolled at the IDHEC (Institut des hautes études
cinématographiques), one of France's leading film schools.
She graduated in 1972 and began a long apprenticeship in filmmaking
before she became a fully fledged film director in 1988 at the age of
40.
Denis began her career as a second assistant director on Dusan
Makavejev's
Sweet Movie
(1974). She soon became a first assistant director and worked
with some distinguished filmmakers, including: Robert Enrico (
Le Vieux Fusil, 1975;
Pile ou face, 1980); Costa-Gavras (
Hanna K., 1983); Wim Wenders (
Paris, Texas, 1984);
Wings of Desire, 1987) and Jim
Jarmusch (
Down by Law,
1986). She also collaborated with New Wave director Jacques
Rivette and later (in 1990) made an insightful documentary about him
for the television series
Cinéma,
de notre temps. It was Wim Wenders who persuaded Denis that she
was ready to start directing her own films.
Clair Denis made her directing debut with
Chocolat
(1988), an intimate autobiographical account of her childhood
experiences in Cameroon. Although, stylistically,
Chocolat is Denis's least typical
work, it deals with themes that would predominate in her oeuvre, in
particular her identification with the outsider. Social and
family estrangement form an essential part of Denis's cinema, and this
doubtless stems from her own sense of estrangement as a child, as a
westerner living in Africa. The main characters in her films are
often social outcasts, people who are forced or choose to live outside
of society. Denis compels us to set aside our prejudices and
identify with them, and she gives us a real sense of what it is like to
live on the margins, barely tolerated and often ignored.
Chocolat was received
favourably by the critics and was nominated for the Palme d'Or at
Cannes. Denis followed this with
Man No Run (1989), a documentary
on a Cameroonian band's first encounter with French culture, and
S'en
fout la mort (1990), a near-documentary drama concerned with
the illicit gambling habits of immigrants in a Parisian suburb.
It was a few years before Denis had her second critical success,
Nénette
et Boni (1996). In this, her most accessible film,
Denis provides an intimate, even tender, portrayal of a brother and
sister who, having grown up to fend for themselves, form a close bond
after years of estrangement. This film marked the beginning of
Denis's long and fruitful collaboration with the actor Grégoire
Colin (actually, the two had previously worked together on Denis's
segment for the anthology film
À
propos de Nice, la suite, 1995).
Beau
travail (1999) was to be Denis's most critically acclaimed
film, a stunningly beautiful reverie on life in the Foreign
Legion. The sensual photography (which lingers longingly on
exposed male flesh) reveals the director's affinity for the human body
and powerfully evokes the homoerotic tensions that lurk beneath the
surface. In her most lyrical and visually arresting film, which
was apparently inspired by Herman Meville's
Billy Budd, Denis crafts an
enchanting visual ode to male bonding and the beauty of the male
physique. The intense eroticism of
Beau travail resurfaces in Denis's
next film,
Trouble Every Day (2001).
A modern vampire story, this combines horror and eroticism in the most
provocative and unseemly manner - no wonder the film is the director's
most controversial and was deluged with negative criticism when it was
first released. The film's distasteful subject matter and Denis's
ugly excursions into Grand Guignol horror make this a difficult film to
watch, let alone like. Denis's next film,
Vendredi
soir (2002), also drew mixed reviews. A brooding
depiction of a one-night stand, the film lacks Denis's inspired touch
and the spectator risks ending up becoming as bored as the protagonists.
After these two mid-career let downs, Claire Denis has shown a
remarkable return to form and she now enjoys a reputation as one of
France's most respected auteur filmmakers. After
L'Intrus
(2004), her most complex and haunting study in estrangement, Denis won
widespread acclaim for
35 rhums (2009), a compelling
portrayal of a father-daughter relationship in a mixed immigrant
community. For her next film,
White Material (2010), Denis
once again draws heavily on her childhood memories of Cameroon and
delivers a film of extraordinary dramatic power, one with a subtle but
effective anti-colonialist message. On the strength of these two
latest films, it is fair to say that Claire Denis's filmmaking career
has entered its mature phase. Whilst she continues to have
something to say about the human condition and can attract talented
performers of the calibre of Isabelle Huppert and Nicolas Duvauchelle,
we can expect to be moved and enchanted by her unique brand of cinema.
© James Travers 2012
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