©-DR-Kathryn Bigelow / Filmo
07/04/2014 11:11 par tellurikwaves
Filmographie / Réalisatrice
Courts métrages
1978 : The Set-up (court-métrage de 17 minutes, réalisé en tant que film étudiant à la Columbia Film School)
2007 : Mission zéro
Longs métrages
1982 : The Loveless (coréalisé avec Monty Montgomery)
1987 : Aux frontières de l'aube (Near Dark)
1990 : Blue steel
1991 : Point Break
1995 : Strange Days
2000 : Le Poids de l'eau (The Weight of Water)
2002 : K-19 : Le piège des profondeurs (K-19 : The Widowmaker)
2009 : Démineurs (The Hurt Locker)
2012 : Zero Dark Thirty
Télévision
1993 : Homicide (épisodes Fallen Heroes: Part 1 & 2 et Lines of Fire)
1993 : Wild Palms (épisode Hour 4)
2003 : Karen Sisco (épisode He was a Friend of Mine)
Actrice
1983 : Les Guerrières (Born in Flames) (de Lizzie Borden)
Productrice
2002 : K-19 : Le piège des profondeurs (K-19 : The Widowmaker)
2005 : The Inside : Dans la tête des tueurs (série TV) (productrice exécutive)
2009 : Démineurs (The Hurt Locker)
Scénariste
1982 : The Loveless (coécrit avec Monty Montgomery)
1985 : Equalizer (saison 1 - épisode 5)(coécrit avec Maurice Hurley et Joel Surnow)
1987 : Aux frontières de l'aube (Near Dark) (coécrit avec Eric Red)
1990 : Blue steel (coécrit avec Eric Red)
1996 : Undertow (coécrit avec Eric Red)
2005 : The Inside : Dans la tête des tueurs (série TV)
Nominations
2010 : Golden Globe du meilleur réalisateur pour Démineurs
2013 : Golden Globe du meilleur réalisateur pour Zero Dark Thirty
Récompenses
Démineurs 2010 : Oscar du meilleur film et du meilleur réalisateur
2010 : BAFTA du meilleur film et du meilleur réalisateur
Zero Dark Thirty2012 : Meilleur réalisateur aux National Board of Review Awards
2012 : Meilleur film, meilleur réalisateur aux New York Film Critics Circle Awards
2012 : Meilleur film, meilleur réalisateur aux New York Film Critics Online Awards
2012 : Meilleur film, meilleur réal aux Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Awards
2012 : Meilleur film, meilleur réalisateur aux Boston Society of Film Critics Awards
2012 : Meilleur réalisateur aux Phoenix Film Critics Society Awards
2012 : Meilleur réalisateur aux Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Awards
2012 : Meilleur film, meilleur réalisateur aux Chicago Film Critics Association Awards
2012 : Meilleur réalisateur aux Nevada Film Critics Society Awards
2012 : Meilleur film, meilleur réalisateur au Black Film Critics Circle
2012 : Meilleur film aux Women Film Critics Circle Awards
2013 : Meilleur film, meilleur réalisateur aux EDA Awards
2013 : Meilleur film, meilleur réalisateur au Vancouver Film Critics Circle
Kathryn Bigelow, née le 27 novembre 1951 à San Carlos (Californie) aux États-Unis, est une réalisatrice et scénariste américaine.
Biographie
Kathryn Bigelow étudie la théorie et la critique de cinéma à l'université Columbia où elle a notamment pour professeurs l'écrivaine Susan Sontag et le cinéaste Miloš Forman.
Après un court métrage avec la violence pour toile de fond (The Set-up), et un film co-réalisé avec Monty Montgomery (The Loveless), Kathryn Bigelow met en scène, en 1987, Aux frontières de l'aube (Near Dark), un film de vampires. La même année, elle réalise la vidéo de Touched by the Hand of God de New Order. Elle tourne ensuite Blue Steel, un film où une jeune policière (Jamie Lee Curtis) est poursuivie par un tueur psychopathe.
En 1991, elle remporte son plus grand succès commercial avec Point Break avec dans les rôles principaux Patrick Swayze et Keanu Reeves. En 1995, Strange Days, un film de science-fiction, reçoit de bonnes critiques mais ne rencontre pas de succès public. Par la suite, elle réalise K-19 : Le piège des profondeurs (K-19 : The Widowmaker), un film se déroulant dans le premier sous-marin nucléaire russe, et Démineurs (The Hurt Locker), un film traitant des démineurs pendant la guerre d'Irak.
Le cinéma de Kathryn Bigelow se déroule généralement dans des univers masculins et a pour thèmes privilégiés la violence, la terreur et l'humanité menacée. En 2010, elle est la première femme à remporter le prix du meilleur film et du meilleur réalisateur pour Démineurs à la 63e cérémonie des BAFTA Awards. Quelques semaines plus tard, lors de la 82e cérémonie des Oscars, elle gagne également le trophée des catégories du meilleur film et du meilleur réalisateur. Le film obtient par ailleurs quatre autres récompenses. Ainsi devient-elle la première femme de l'histoire du cinéma à recevoir l'Oscar de la meilleure réalisation. En janvier 2013, sort Zero Dark Thirty (nommé aux Oscars 2013), un film consacré à la traque de Ben Laden.
Vie privée
Le 17 août 1989, Kathryn Bigelow épouse le réalisateur James Cameron. Le couple divorce en 1991.
Nominations
70e cérémonie des Golden Globes Golden Globe du meilleur film dramatique
Golden Globe du meilleur réalisateur
Golden Globe du meilleur scénario
85e cérémonie des Oscars
Oscar du meilleur film
Oscar de la meilleure actrice pour Jessica Chastain
Oscar du meilleur scénario original
Oscar du meilleur montage
Distinctions/ Récompenses
2012 : New York Film Critics Circle Awards : meilleur film, meilleur réalisateur et meilleure photographie
2012 : New York Film Critics Online Awards : meilleur film, meilleur réalisateur, meilleur scénario
2012 : National Board of Review Awards : meilleur film et meilleure actrice
2012 : Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association Awards : meilleur film, meilleur réalisateur et meilleure actrice
2012 : Boston Society of Film Critics Awards : meilleur film, meilleur réalisateur et meilleur montage
2012 : Las Vegas Film Critics Society Awards : meilleur montage
2012 : St. Louis Film Critics Association Awards : meilleure actrice et meilleur scénario original
2012 : Satellite Awards : meilleur scénario original
2012 : Phoenix Film Critics Society Awards : meilleur réalisateur, meilleure actrice
2012 : Indiana Film Journalists Association Awards : meilleure actrice
2012 : Austin Film Critics Association Awards : meilleur film
2012 : Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Awards : meilleur réalisateur, meilleure actrice, meilleur scénario
2012 : Florida Film Critics Circle Awards : meilleure actrice
2012 : Chicago Film Critics Association Awards : meilleur film, meilleur réalisateur, meilleure actrice, meilleur scénario original
2012 : Utah Film Critics Association Awards : meilleur film, meilleure actrice
2012 : Nevada Film Critics Society Awards : meilleure réalisatrice
2012 : African-American Film Critics Association Awards : meilleur film
2012 : Black Film Critics Circle : meilleur film, meilleur réalisateur, meilleure actrice
2012 : Women Film Critics Circle Awards : meilleur film
2013 : EDA Awards : meilleur film, meilleure réalisatrice, meilleure actrice, meilleur scénario original, meilleur montage
2013 : Iowa Film Critics Association Awards : meilleure actrice
2013 : Vancouver Film Critics Circle : meilleur film, meilleur réalisateur, meilleure actrice, meilleur scénario
2013 : Golden Globe de la meilleure actrice dans un film dramatique
2013 : Critics' Choice Movie Awards : meilleure actrice et meilleur montage
2013 : Village Voice Film Poll : meilleur scénario
2013 : Writers Guild of America Awards : meilleur scénario
2013 : Oscar du meilleur montage de son
2013 : Prix du sous-titrage 2012-2013 (catégorie « film anglophone ») attribué à Maï Boiron, pour les sous-titres français.
Kathryn Bigelow
*
*
*
Roger Ebert
January 2, 2013
Osama bin Laden is dead, which everybody knows, and the principal facts leading up to that are also well-known. The decision to market "Zero Dark Thirty" as a thriller therefore takes a certain amount of courage, even given the fascination with this most zero and dark of deaths. (The title is spy-speak for "half past midnight," the time of bin Laden's death.)
The film stars Jessica Chastain, the ubiquitous new star who now dominates the American acting landscape. One could even argue that the film is Jessica Chastain and her character. She plays "Maya," a lone wolf CIA agent who sticks to her conviction that bin Laden is not in a cave in Afghanistan, hunched over a kidney dialysis machine, but is likely living in relatively open sight.
In reality, when the terrorist was finally tracked down and taken out, the universal astonishment was that his hiding place was a large, walled compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, and that his residence there was relatively widely known -- in the same area, anyway, as the location of a Pakistan military college. Most of the film involves the search of the allied side, including the tracing down of leads that many Americans considered too obvious and in plain sight to be plausible.
To Maya, however, that is the whole beauty of bin Laden's scheme; one is reminded of Poe's "The Purloined Letter": It is wise to conceal something in plain sight. What takes imagination is to act on it - to back her hunch with the impulse to believe it is plausible. Here is a disagreement between the time-honored methods of espionage and a quicker, more intuitive approach involving a hunch too good to be true.
The film's first two hours or so consist of a struggle between the Maya faction and the Maya non-believers, and the stakes are huge in the decision to pull the trigger. Consider the embarrassment to President Barack Obama and his advisers if they had turned out to be publicly, sensationally, embarrassingly wrong. You can't call in the Navy SEALs to break into a huge compound on the land of a nation that is theoretically, anyway, an ally.
The administration's subsequent portrait of those climactic moments and the possibiliy of its being wrong are very convincing. The subtext deserves a movie of its own, about a disagreement between macho males who feast on torture and hard-boiled guts, and a woman who depends on more on her intelligence and imagination. The leading male characters in the opening of the film are in the tradition of that beloved formula in which an expert team acts together with high tech. Maya, on the other hand, is more like the dutiful female heroine of one of those thrillers set in big business and corporate finance, who uses no privileged intelligence but is willing to fly in the face of the way men have always done things.
As Maya, Chastain shows again how versatile an actress she is. Apart from Meryl Streep, who else has appeared in new movies with such a range and ability to convince? Much credit is due to former journalist Mark Boal, the Oscar-winning screenwriter of Bigelow's "The Hurt Locker," who begins with facts and not a formula easily shaped into conventional forms of fiction. I gather that much of his and Bigelow's early preparation for this film took place before it began to be known (in those shadowy places where such things reside) that the end of this film could not turn out quite as everyone expected.
The film's opening scenes are not great filmmaking.They're heavy on jargon and impenetrable calculation, murky and heavy on theory. The parts that everyone now wants to see involve the attack itself. Here the film uses the modern style of underlit Shaky-Cam, with dialogue hard to follow and rapid action in shadows and confusion. We do finally see a version of what must have happened, and even see something of bin Laden's face and the moments of his death, and it's all well-enough made, but to paraphrase the MGM slogan, "That's not entertainment."
The raid on the compound cannot logically be well-lighted and staged, and the portrayal of bin Laden and the other occupants of his home cannot be based on our knowledge of his personality and motivation, because that's not how the film starts out. Thus the "Zero Dark Thirty" raid is not so much a payoff for the events that have been building onscreen, but is a masterstroke of fate.
My guess is that much of the fascination with this film is inspired by the unveiling of facts, unclearly seen. There isn't a whole lot of plot -- basically, just that Maya thinks she is right, and she is. The back story is that Bigelow has become a modern-day directorial heroine, which may be why this film is winning even more praise than her masterful Oscar-winner "The Hurt Locker." That was a film firmly founded on plot, character and actors whose personalities and motivations became well-known to the audience. Its performances are razor-sharp and detailed, the acting restrained, the timing perfect.
In comparison, "Zero Dark Thirty" is a slam-bang action picture, depending on Maya's inspiration. One problem may be that Maya turns out to be correct, with a long, steady build-up depriving the climax of much of its impact and providing mostly irony. Do we want to know more about Osama bin Laden and al Qaida and the history and political grievances behind them? Yes, but that's not how things turned out. Sorry, but there you have it.
Propaganda done properly
6/10
Author: rooee from United Kingdom
28 January 2013
Zero Dark Thirty is a procedural CIA-based thriller in the mould of TV's Homeland. This film, however, is based on real-life events, so it doesn't have the benefit of being able to withhold in the way Homeland's first series did with Twin Peaks-like delectation. What Zero Dark Thirty does have is a narrative based on first-hand accounts, and it makes no explicit judgement about the content of those accounts. We simply get to see what (apparently) happened during the manhunt for "UBJ".
The film's lack of polemic is both a blessing a curse. It's a blessing because it's rare that a film dealing with such volatile subject matter is depicted procedurally. Usually when a narrative is made ostensibly apolitical it's as a result of an unconvincing moral rebalancing, where the filmmakers go to great lengths to present both sides fairly. But Mark Boal and Kathryn Bigelow's disinterest is also a curse because, in avoiding judgement, it surreptitiously falls firmly on the side of the CIA.
It shows what it's allowed to show, but keeps their secrets ("undisclosed location" and all that); and it portrays the operatives as the honourable front-liners getting their hands dirty (but not bloody), beyond moral reproach by virtue of hard graft. In Bigelow's world, it's the suits in Washington who have the blood in their hands - they're disconnected, as evidenced when torture-specialist Dan (Jason Clarke) returns to US headquarters from the field and loses his nerve, becoming a man of soft probabilities.
Clarke is solid but lost amidst superior talent, as he was in John Hillcoat's recent Lawless. Jessica Chastain delivers a nuanced performance. Driven professionals in films often come across as stolid, but Chastain is an actor of subtlety - even if Bigelow can't help lensing her like a wind-swept movie star in the Middle Eastern magic light. Jennifer Ehle uses her moon-faced radiance to good effect, filling her eager operative Jessica with youthful energy. There's a fair amount of distracting spot-the-cameo going on, particularly toward the end, when Joel Edgerton, Mark Duplass and James Gandolfini turn up.
Bigelow's directorial talent is never in doubt. The final sequence in particular is harrowingly tense, even though we know the outcome. And she generally gets the best out of actors. But make no mistake: this is a deeply patriotic film which is cheering for the home team, and it does so under the guise of objectivity, which makes it more manipulative than flag-waving fare like Last Ounce of Courage or Act of Valor, albeit much more skilfully made.
The Straightforward Hunt
10/10
Author: Mek Torres from Los Banos, Laguna, Philippines
13 January 2013
One's appeal for Zero Dark Thirty is to see how it depicts the search for Osama Bin Laden like it seems too impossible to find him, like he's probably already dead, or almost doesn't exist. Even though there are controversies going around and some revelations, the story is still all dramatized. Without a surprise from director Kathryn Bigelow, the film is totally electrifying and deliberately engrossing.
There is humanity left in the end that made this a lot more compelling, but that's the last thing we should talk about. It never backs away from the promise and stays focus on the mission. Zero Dark Thirty is a powerfully gripping thriller. It's a straightforward mission and only about the mission. We can see the main protagonist's obsession of capturing Bin Laden even without showing any backstories.
She's brave, probably too brave, enough on what she's doing. They have to make difficult decisions to where are they gonna go or who are they gonna find. The film is indeed a dramatize version of the ten year hunt. It plays too much suspense and sudden shock, but no matter what, every tragic event are still portrayed in a completely terrifying way.
There is no doubt this film will fall into a controversy. It features a torture scene that many think they justify it. It is so talked about and was against it but it seems the scenes only exists nothing more than showing that sort of truth. The most awaited part of the movie is indeed the climax. Just like anyone would imagine, it's a silent and mercilessly violent raid. There's a lot of humanity in the character Maya. As much as she aggressively wanted to find her target, she still cannot stomach any brutal interrogation and tragedy happening on her associates and other people.
Jessica Chastain manages to weigh all of her personalities. Other strong actors like Jason Clarke, Kyle Chandler, Jennifer Ehle, and Mark Strong keeps their roles effective as well.Kathryn Bigelow's prominent style is slick tension. Here she displays danger in any place where the characters go like something will suddenly explode or a loud gunfire. The action scenes is filled with suspense. One of the sequences can be tad too ridiculous for this movie but it didn't ruin a single thing to the experience. When it takes place inside the CIA or a meeting, it gets undeniably absorbing. The screen writing makes sure it's factual enough and interesting.
People's expectations might mislead them. Zero Dark Thirty is not only about finding and killing Osama Bin Laden but it's also about one's obsession and revenge to this terrorist. In the end, there's plenty of guilt to express but that proves that they are still human beings. We could merit its brilliant filmmaking and strong storytelling that made it feel like we're part of the search. We all know this is just a dramatization of the true events but all the horrifying truths like the violence stays to the picture.
It's a story with nobody calling themselves heroes even though they defeated their enemy. It depicts the darkest parts of its history. Some might wonder how worse it could have been but ignoring all the commotion, Zero Dark Thirty is still a compelling thriller.