Dusan Makavejev
Dusan Makavejev was born on Oct 13, 1932 in Yugoslavia. Dusan Makavejev's big-screen debut came with Man Is Not a Bird directed by Dusan Makavejev in 1965. Dusan Makavejev is known for The Soldier's Tale directed by R.O. Blechman, Max von Sydow stars as The Devil and Dusan Makavejev as Ilya Grigorivich Vertov, The Soldier. Dusan Makavejev has got 10 awards and 7 nominations so far. The most recent award Dusan Makavejev achieved is Motovun Film Festival. The upcoming new movie Dusan Makavejev plays is Danish Girls Show Everything which will be released on Jun 14, 1996.
Dusan Makavejev is the premier figure in Yugoslavian film history; his films are deeply rooted in his nation's painful postwar experiences and draw on important Yugoslavian cinematic and cultural models. Makavejev's work has violated many political and sexual taboos and invited censorship in dozens of nations. In the 1950s, after studying psychology at Belgrade University, Makavejev became involved in the activities of various film societies and festivals and studied direction at the Academy for Radio, Television and Film. As early as 1953, he began making short films and documentaries and would work in various capacities at both the Zagreb and Avala studios during the late 50s and early 60s. The documentary impulse remains powerful in Makavejev's work, as does the tendency to intercut undigested segments from other films into longer works.Makavejev enjoyed great critical success with his first three features, L'homme n'est pas un oiseau (1965), "Love Affair" (1967) and Innocence sans protection (1968). Highly allegorical and relying on techniques derived from Brecht and influenced by Godard, these films were sardonic and anarchistic views of Eastern European state socialist milieus.Much of Makavejev's work has been uncompromisingly experimental as well as politically outrageous. WR ou les mystères de l'organisme (1971) is the best example of this combination and is the director's most influential work to date. Much of the film is composed of a documentary Makavejev researched in the late 1960s while in the US on a Ford Foundation grant and which was eventually financed by German TV. A witty, passionate, and often rambling account of pioneering psychoanalyst Wilhelm Reich and his American disciples, the material is intercut with a fictitious political-sexual allegory set in contemporary Belgrade. The film was instantly banned in Yugoslavia and made Makavejev persona non grata in his native country until the late 1980s.Sweet Movie (1974) was made in Canadian exile, with some production resources furnished by the National Film Board of Canada. Also a disjointed, two-part narrative, it again focuses on radical techniques in sexual psychotherapy, here played out rather than verbalized. Intertwined is yet another acidic, allegorical fable of the decay of Yugoslavia's socialist legacy. Extremely violent and sexually explicit, "Sweet Movie" was dismissed (and censored) as pornography in many countries, and added to Makavejev's reputation as a "filmmaker maudit."Les fantasmes de Madame Jordan (1981) has been Makavejev's greatest financial success to date. Political commentary and formal experimentation are subordinated to narrative drive in this story of a housewife (Susan Anspach) who grapples with sexual liberation and fails.Coca-Cola kid (1985), Makavejev's second major international co-production, was marred by on-set squabbles between actors, and the rejection of Makavejev's intriguing plan to use a long reel of multilingual Coca-Cola commercials as a narrative structuring device. What emerged was a genuinely erotic film which takes a quirky, satiric view both of its Australian setting and the international business world.Makavejev's long exile from his homeland ended in 1988 with the release of Pour une nuit d'amour (1988), a Ruritanian political farce mostly shot in Yugoslavia. Although the film marks the most disciplined, traditional storytelling of Makavejev's career, it has seen only limited bookings in the US. Also little seen was his follow-up Gorilla Bathes at Noon (1993), a political comedy based on the adventures of a Russian soldier as he wanders around Berlin.Profession(s): director, screenwriter, professor, essayist Sometimes Credited As: Sam RotterdamFamily wife: Bojana Marijan (married in 1964; has worked with Makavejev)Education Academy of Theater, Radio, Film and Television Belgrade, Yugoslavia Belgrade University Belgrade, Yugoslavia psychology 1955.
Birthday
Oct 13, 1932Place of Birth
Belgrade, Serbia, Yugoslavia
Known For
Awards
10 wins & 7 nominations
Movies & TV Shows
- 1996
director
6.1 - 1993
director, writer
5.6 - 19926.2
- 1988
director, writer
6.1 - 1987
writer
6.1 - 1985
director
5.9 - 19847.4
- 1981
director, writer
6.6 - 1974
director, writer
6.0 - 1971
director, writer
6.7 - 1968
writer, director
7.1 - 1965
director, writer
7.1