Xixax Film Forum

The Director's Chair => The Director's Chair => Topic started by: Finn on November 13, 2004, 05:30:40 PM

Title: CAMPION
Post by: Finn on November 13, 2004, 05:30:40 PM
Does anyone else consider Jane Campion to be brilliant? I think she's very artistic and she always seem to have a fascination with the dark side. With "The Piano", "Portrait of a Lady" and "In the Cut", she seems to be interested in males dominating over the females in some way. I think her approach is brutal, brilliant and usually daring.
Title: CAMPION
Post by: The Silver Bullet on November 13, 2004, 06:02:58 PM
I wouldn't say "brilliant," thought The Piano is one of my favourite films of the '90s.
Title: CAMPION
Post by: Pubrick on November 13, 2004, 06:52:56 PM
overrated and too old to do anything about it.
Title: CAMPION
Post by: MacGuffin on November 13, 2004, 06:58:21 PM
Quote from: Pubrickoverrated

...and so is The Piano.
Title: CAMPION
Post by: Ghostboy on November 13, 2004, 07:06:37 PM
I love The Piano. I appreciated elements of In The Cut, and thought it wasn't as bad as everyone said (for the most part). And I love the documentary on the making of Portrait Of A Lady, although I haven't seen the film itself. Again, I love The Piano, which I don't think is overrated one tiny bit.
Title: CAMPION
Post by: MacGuffin on November 13, 2004, 07:45:41 PM
Quote from: GhostboyAgain, I love The Piano, which I don't think is overrated one tiny bit.

Why does she send him a note knowing he can't read?
Title: CAMPION
Post by: Ghostboy on November 13, 2004, 08:12:46 PM
People forget things sometimes when they're highly stressed.
Title: CAMPION
Post by: NEON MERCURY on November 13, 2004, 09:58:07 PM
the only on eof here films that i hav eseen was in the cut.  i liked it. but my reasoning for my high regard for this film is the cinematography  its really lurid, seedy and beautiful...
Title: CAMPION
Post by: Gloria on November 13, 2004, 11:44:53 PM
Quote from: MacGuffin
Quote from: Pubrickoverrated

...and so is The Piano.

Finally...I thought I was the only one who thought this.  The Piano really wasn't as great as people make it out to be.
Title: CAMPION
Post by: The Silver Bullet on November 13, 2004, 11:57:18 PM
Quote from: MacGuffinWhy does she send him a note knowing he can't read?
Wow! What a great reason to dislike something.

Maybe it was thought that counted...

Has anyone seen Sweetie? I've heard good things about it, though I've not yet seen it myself. I enjoyed In the Cut for the most part, but had issues that I can't recall right now [I just remember that I had them]. To be fair, I think there's far more to In the Cut than one viewing can really uncover.

By the way, if you're able to, try and track down her film school graduation piece, A Girl's Own Story. Some of it ["you wanna play cats?"; the scene at the dinner table] is really quite good, even if it takes one or two viewings to really appreciate [as it did in my case].
Title: CAMPION
Post by: MacGuffin on November 14, 2004, 12:27:37 AM
Quote from: The Silver Bullet
Quote from: MacGuffinWhy does she send him a note knowing he can't read?
Wow! What a great reason to dislike something.

Maybe it was thought that counted...

It's a sloppy devise that fits the story and a major plot-hole that people who like the movie either fail to acknowledge or have their own reasons for but nothing is explained clearly. But it wasn't my only reason. I didn't like the Holly Hunter character. She's taken advantage of and forced into a 'prostitution' for piano keys and is basically a 'whore'. Yes, I know, the piano is her 'voice', but she can find strength without being the 'object' of the two men and (willingly) 'selling' her body.
Title: CAMPION
Post by: Alethia on November 14, 2004, 02:10:43 AM
Quote from: The Silver Bullet
Quote from: MacGuffinWhy does she send him a
even if it takes one or two viewings to really appreciate

you generally do have to see something at least once to appreciate it at all
Title: Re: CAMPION
Post by: MacGuffin on May 25, 2006, 01:18:04 AM
Campion's 'Star' turn: Keats tale

CANNES -- Palme d'Or winner Jane Campion said she is prepping the romantic period drama "Bright Star" for Pathe U.K., the British-based production arm of France's Pathe Entertainment. The project, which Campion is writing, is a drama based on the three-year romance between 19th century poet John Keats and Fanny Brawne, which was cut short by Keats' untimely death at age 25. "I'm still in the process of writing it, and we don't know yet when we're going into production," she said Tuesday at the Australian Film Commission's 30th anniversary party in Cannes.
Title: Re: CAMPION
Post by: grand theft sparrow on May 25, 2006, 07:59:36 AM
They should just make the tagline:  "If you love poetry and being forced to cry..."

$100 they get Jonathan Rhys-Meyers for Keats.
Title: Re: CAMPION
Post by: MacGuffin on May 25, 2006, 11:57:50 AM
Get shorty
It's usually first-time directors who make a splash at Cannes with their short films. But now, more established names are getting in on the act. Jane Campion tells Xan Brooks why small is beautiful
Source: The Guardian

Cannes is the world of the brief encounter. For 10 days the place runs to a staccato rhythm of snatched conversations, bullet-point pitches, round-table junkets and business lunches. Away from the glare of the Palme d'Or competition, it has increasingly become the world of the brief film, too.

The short has always had its place at the Cannes film festival, with a number of programmes playing both in and out of competition. They provide a crucial platform for novice directors, the chance to show the industry what they are made of and - fingers crossed - drum up the funds for that all-important first feature.

But this year the balance has shifted, with these comparative ghettos of the schedule surprisingly gate-crashed by the rich and famous. The likes of Walter Salles (Motorcycle Diaries), Alexander Payne (Sideways), Alfonso Cuaron (Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban) and Gaspar Noe (Irréversible) would not look out of place in the main competition line-up. Jane Campion, Gus Van Sant and the Coen brothers are former Palme d'Or winners. All of them have short films in this year's event.

Campion's piece, The Water Diary, is a lyrical, child's-eye view of an Australian township paralysed by drought. It is the director's contribution to 8, a series of movies strung around a weighty brief: the United Nation's development project on millennium goals. "I told them I would do it if I was given complete control," she explains. "I could just imagine what hell it would be if everyone started getting involved and gave me suggestions. This was a good way for us all to be freed. It's my fault if I get it wrong. Blame the film-maker." The Water Diary took just six days to shoot. It was, she says, "a little holiday".

Campion admits that short films are often seen as the poor relations of cinema. "But they are not inferior, just different. I think the short gives a freedom to film-makers. What's appealing is that you don't have as much responsibility for storytelling and plot. They can be more like a portrait, or a poem. The great thing is that almost everyone ends up doing something creative with them, even those directors who then go on to make quite boring features."

You could say that The Water Diary has carried her full-circle. Campion first came to Cannes back in 1986 when her short piece, Peel, won a major prize at the festival. "I was so naïve back then," she says. "When they said they were putting my work in the programme I said, 'Oh, that's nice'. They said, 'Well, obviously you have to come' and I said, 'Oh no, I don't have that scheduled in my diary and I don't really enjoy that sort of thing anyway'. Fortunately they managed to convince me otherwise." Campion, of course, went on to further glory at Cannes when The Piano won the Palme d'Or at the 1993 festival.

This year she is keeping a lower profile, sheltering in the shade of a bar on the beach. She arrived with her daughter on the train from Rome, and has no particular thing that she needs to do. "It's nice coming here with a short film as opposed to a feature," she says. "It's a very relaxing way to see Cannes." Tonight she is planning catch a showing of Marie Antoinette. One senses that she is here as a tourist first and a film-maker second.

Described as "un film collectif", 8 points to a possible way forward for the short film. Evidence suggests that these bite-sized canapés traditionally struggle to connect with an audience accustomed to the banquet of the bona-fide feature. By grouping their work under a single thematic umbrella, the maker of short films is able to bypass such prejudices.

Playing further up the Croisette, Destricted boasts a rather different brief - a series of "responses to the theme of pornography by seven different artists". So far the tactic seems to be working. The queues go round the block while the mood in the cinema is festive, bordering on the bawdy. The tyro French director Gaspar Noe bounds up and down the aisle to greet the new arrivals. Larry Clark (of Kids and Bully fame) slopes to his seat with a furtive, watchful air. We learn that British artist Sam Taylor-Wood, who was also intending to be here to discuss her contribution, had to cancel because she's pregnant - that pesky consequence of actually having sex as opposed to filming it.

Destricted, inevitably, is a bit of a mixed bag. While some of the segments are genuine "responses to pornography", others are just pornography. Clark's film, Impaled, turns out to be one of the better efforts. The director interviews a gaggle of wannabe male porn stars, makes them strip for the camera and then abruptly introduces the winner to the woman he is supposed to have sex with. Elsewhere, Noe's film is a stroboscopic montage of brutish masturbation fantasies. Anyone who has caught his features (Irréversible, I Stand Alone) will know what to expect.

Like Campion, Noe won a short film prize at Cannes at the start of his career. Like her, he is drawn to the form for the freedom it provides. "With a short you are allowed to do whatever you want," he tells me afterwards. "It's like if you have a girlfriend and she tells you that you can do whatever you want. That's very exciting." He appears to be still stuck in steamy, Destricted mode.

The problem, explains Noe, is that the process of making a feature can be such a long and painful process. "It takes years out of your life. You get the green light and then it turns back to amber and you have to start all over again. Here you get the call and you have to come up with an idea and shoot it straight away. It feels so wonderfully fresh and liberating." For good measure, Noe also has a film about Aids, Sida, playing alongside Campion's in 8.

Finally we have Paris Je t'Aime, playing in the festival's Un Certain Regard section. It offers a sunnier, gentler example of the portmanteau movie: 18 five-minute love-letters to Paris, each one set in a different arrondissement. Its range of directors runs the gamut from Wes Craven to Gus Van Sant, Cuaron to the Coens.

At the Cannes press junket, the film-makers sit at a bank of round tables while the journalists bob between them like bees above a flowerbed. I speak to South African director Oliver Schmitz, who says that he found the format to be deceptively difficult, and that the act of boiling a life story down into one five-minute spell would be a challenge for anyone. Richard Lagravenese (who wrote The Fisher King and directed A Decade Under the Influence) suggests that we are entering a golden age for the short film, and that the internet provides the perfect platform for viewers who want entertainment in small doses.

Paris Je t'Aime is the brainchild of Marseilles-born Frederic Auburtin, who co-directs one segment alongside Gérard Depardieu. Apparently the original intention was to have 20 films in the collection. "Francis Coppola and Woody Allen were both very eager to get involved," Auburtin says. "They said yes straight away and stayed with the project for a long time. But in the end it didn't happen." Why was that? "They couldn't fit it in with their schedules," he says with a sigh. "They went off and made features instead." Amid all the generally positive talk, Auburtin strikes a rare downbeat note. For all its recent success, it seems that the short is not the new long after all - at least not quite yet.
Title: Re: CAMPION
Post by: godardian on May 25, 2006, 07:32:41 PM
An Angel at My Table is Campion's best film, IMO; what with all the Criterion whores 'round here, I'm surprised it's not been brought up. It's excellent and exactly the kind of story she clearly became a filmmaker in order to tell. Sweetie is quite nice, a tad self-consciously "quirky." Portrait of a Lady is very nicely done except for the silly title credits. Holy Smoke! is divisive and probably flawed but really, truly interesting enough to be well worth seeing.

I would have to see The Piano again. Because that and Jean-Jaques Annaud's The Lover came out at around the same time--in 1993, when I was 17--I kind of think of them as a pair of erotica-tinged art-house films of a very particular type, but in retrospect, they both fit too easily into that type. That being said, I will always remember both as a bit of a cinematic awakening for me.

I kind of think of Sally Potter as the more successful version of a feminist filmmaker. When you compare her to Jane Campion, there's a bit more rigor and adventurousness in her work that, on the whole, places her films a notch above.
Title: Re: CAMPION
Post by: MacGuffin on March 27, 2007, 12:37:56 AM
Cornish well-versed for 'Star'
Source: Hollywood Reporter

Abbie Cornish in negotiations to topline Jane Campion's period romance drama "Bright Star."

The script, which Campion wrote and is directing, is based on the three-year romance between 19th century poet John Keats and Fanny Brawne, which was cut short by Keats' untimely death at age 25. Cornish will portray Brawne.

Pathe International is behind the movie, which is being produced by Jan Chapman.

The production is eyeing a late summer or early fall start.

The CAA-repped Cornish recently starred opposite Russell Crowe in Ridley Scott's "A Good Year." She will appear in "Stop Loss," directed by Kimberly Peirce, coming from Paramount later this year, as well as in the Cate Blanchett starrer "The Golden Age," directed by Shekhar Kapur.
Title: Re: CAMPION
Post by: MacGuffin on April 04, 2007, 10:56:34 PM
Whishaw in 'Star' turn for Campion pic
Source: Hollywood Reporter

LONDON -- Ben Whishaw, who starred in "Perfume: The Story of a Murderer," is sniffing out a lead role in writer-director Jane Campion's "Bright Star," the film's team said Wednesday.

Whishaw is in final negotiations to star as poet John Keats in the period romance drama for Pathe International.

"Star" focuses on the three-year romance between 19th century poet Keats and Fanny Brawne, to be played by Abbie Cornish. The poet's romance was cut short by Keats' untimely death at age 25.

Whishaw is about to begin shooting "Brideshead Revisited," alongside Hayley Atwell and Matthew Goode, and in the fall will appear in Todd Haynes' "I'm Not There" as one of the seven actors portraying Bob Dylan.

Campion's movie is scheduled to begin filming in late summer or early fall.
Title: Re: CAMPION
Post by: polkablues on April 04, 2007, 11:36:32 PM
Quote from: MacGuffin on April 04, 2007, 10:56:34 PM
Ben Whishaw, who starred in "Perfume: The Story of a Murderer," is sniffing out a lead role

Heh... I see what they did there.
Title: Re: CAMPION
Post by: MacGuffin on April 05, 2007, 01:02:42 AM
Quote from: polkablues on April 04, 2007, 11:36:32 PM
Quote from: MacGuffin on April 04, 2007, 10:56:34 PM
Ben Whishaw, who starred in "Perfume: The Story of a Murderer," is sniffing out a lead role

Heh... I see what they did there.

You must have a sixth sense.
Title: Re: CAMPION
Post by: hedwig on April 05, 2007, 01:05:57 AM
(https://xixax.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fi11.photobucket.com%2Falbums%2Fa175%2FLeven321%2F250px-Movie_i_see_dead_people.jpg&hash=1f3f9eb43a52fcce4530d830efe281a3f63fe907)
"i see bad puns.."
Title: Re: CAMPION
Post by: MacGuffin on May 13, 2014, 07:07:14 AM
Jane Campion Near Deal to Direct Adaptation of 'The Flamethrowers'
Source: Variety

Jane Campion is nearing a deal to direct an adaptation of Rachel Kushner's New York Times bestseller "The Flamethrowers," according to The Guardian.

The legendary filmmaker told the newspaper that Scott Rudin is on board to produce the film about the underground art scene.

Kushner's novel explores art and radicalism in 1970s New York. The critical hit, which was dubbed a feminist novel by many, was a finalist for the National Book Award last year.

Most recently, Campion co-wrote and co-directed the 2013 Sundance Channel miniseries "Top of the Lake," which earned star Elisabeth Moss a Golden Globe win.

As the first woman to win a Palme d'Or and the second woman to ever be nominated for a directing Oscar, Campion is a pioneer in the industry. She won an Oscar for writing the 1993 drama "The Piano."

"Filmmaking is not about whether you're a man or a woman; it's about sensitivity and hard work and really loving what you do," she told The Guardian. "But women are going to tell different stories. There would be many more stories in the world if women were making more films."

Campion is currently serving as president of the Cannes Film Festival jury.