Jean-Jacques Beineix

Jean-Jacques Beineix

second unit director or assistant director, producer, director

Jean-Jacques Beineix was born on Oct 08, 1946 in France. Jean-Jacques Beineix's big-screen debut came with Le cinéma de papa directed by Claude Berri in 1971. Jean-Jacques Beineix is known for Betty Blue directed by Jean-Jacques Beineix, Jean-Hugues Anglade stars as Zorg and Béatrice Dalle as Betty. Jean-Jacques Beineix has got 6 awards and 13 nominations so far. The most recent award Jean-Jacques Beineix achieved is Dingle International Film Festival. The upcoming new movie Jean-Jacques Beineix plays is Requiem for Billy the Kid which will be released on Jan 10, 2007.

A rabid movie fan when he was young, Jean-Jacques Beineix first studied medicine before entering the movie business. During the seventies, he became an established assistant director, working with Claude Berri, René Clément, Claude Zidi and even Jerry Lewis. But, like many assistants, Beineix's ultimate dream was to direct. He had a pass at it in 1977 with the short Le chien de Monsieur Michel (1977). A promising debut, it won the first price at Trouville Festival and earned a César nomination for best short film (fiction).In 1981, came his first long feature Diva (1981), a stylish thriller based on a book by Delacorta. When it came out, Diva was not supported by French critics and seemed at first well on its way to crash and burn. But slowly the film gained momentum due to good word of mouth and positive reactions in various festivals like Moscow and Toronto. Ultimately, the film became a great success internationally, winning four Césars along the way.Next came the expensive La Lune dans le caniveau (1983). An adaptation of a David Goodis novel, the film was even more radical than 'Diva' in its deliberate artificiality. Premiered at Cannes film festival in 1983, the film was booed and most critics found it pretentious and boring. Only few voices rose up to defend the movie but it was not enough to save it. It flopped at the box office but manage to win one César for set design.At that point, Beineix's career was in serious danger of biting the dust, but he came back in force in 1986 with 37°2 le matin (1986) (aka 'Betty Blue'), based on a 'Philippe Djian' novel. Despite mixed reviews, the film was another international hit, won the top price at Montréal festival, and was nominated for best foreign film at both the Oscars and Golden Globes, each time losing to Fons Rademakers' 'De Aanslag'. It also earned 9 César nominations including best film and best director ... but won only for best poster !Beineix's next movie Roselyne et les Lions (1989), set in the circus world, came and went unnoticed. In 1992, IP5: L'île aux pachydermes (1992) got attention mostly for being Yves Montand's last role. Beineix then resurfaced where he was least expected with social documentaries. He did a film about children in Romania; Otaku (1994) was shot in Japan; Assigné à résidence (1997) was about locked-in syndrome victim Jean-Dominique Bauby.In 2001, he came back to fiction with Mortel Transfert (2001), a psycho-thriller based on a Jean-Pierre Gattegno novel. Once again, critics were lukewarm and the film performed poorly at the box-office. In 2002, however, Beineix drew strong ratings with made for TV documentary Loft Paradoxe (2002), an attempt to analyse the success of reality show 'Loft Story'.With his intense focus on the power of images, Beineix paved the way for directors like Luc Besson, Leos Carax and Jean-Pierre Jeunet. A self-proclaimed misanthropist who never hid his contempt for producers and was often deemed excessive and irascible, he will go down in the history books as a director who raised controversy not for the subjects he tackled but for his stylistic approach. Still, with Diva (1981) and 37°2 le matin (1986), he directed two of the few French films of the eighties that reached an international audience.

  • Birthday

    Oct 08, 1946
  • Place of Birth

    Paris, France

Known For

Awards

6 wins & 13 nominations

Dingle International Film Festival
2011
Winner - Gregory Peck Award: For Excellence in The Art of Film
Seattle International Film Festival
1992
Best Director
Winner - Golden Space Needle Award
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Movies & TV Shows

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Movies