Emir Kusturica

Widely regarded as one of the most innovative filmmakers of his generation, Emir Kusturica twice won the Cannes Film Festival Palme d'Or before the age of 40, and, film for film, it is difficult to think of a more consistently lauded artist than this Bosnian-born director. Possessing the persona of a rock star (he once played bass in the agit-rock band No Smoking and still makes guest appearances with them), he is the antithesis of the Hollywood director, viewing the world as a naif or a dreamer and only helming projects that move him strongly. Though the commerce of movies remains foreign to Kusturica, the opportunity to make a visual statement still drives his work. No fan of the close-up, he always tries to connect one person with what is going on in the midground and background (much like John Frankenheimer), and he has successfully worked with non-actors in the tradition of Italian neo-realism (e.g., Roberto Rossellini). As a result of his unpopular stand regarding the civil war in the former Yugoslavia, however, he finds himself scorned in his own land, literally a director without a country.

While studying under Jiri Menzel at Prague's FAMU, Kusturica met Vilko Filac, his cinematographer of choice on all his films through "Underground" (1995). On the strength of his award-winning diploma film, "Guernica" (1976), he entered TV and helmed two critically-acclaimed movies ("The Brides Are Coming" 1978 and "Buffet Titanic" 1979) before making an auspicious feature debut with "Do You Remember Dolly Bell?" (1981), a coming-of-age story set in Sarajevo in the early 1960s, which won the Golden Lion for best first film at the Venice Film Festival. "When Father Was Away on Business" (1985) was an absorbing portrait of provincial life and politics in 50s Yugoslavia, partially seen through the eyes of a six-year-old child and confirmed Kusturica as an international director of note, earning such prizes as the Palme d'Or at Cannes, five Golden Arena awards (the Yugoslavian equivalent of the Oscar) and an Academy Award nomination as Best Foreign-Language Film.

"Time of the Gypsies" (1988) was his first film that did not contain a single frame shot in his beloved Sarajevo. Inspired by a newspaper article about the inter-European trade in young gypsy children, it employed an elliptical, fantastic style influenced by Latin American "magical realism" (i.e., Jorge Luis Borges) and featured non-professional, gypsy actors delivering most of their dialogue in Romany (a language the director barely understood). "Gypsies" brought further critical acclaim earning the Best Director award at the 1989 Cannes Film Festival. Kusturica then embarked on his first English-language film, "Arizona Dream" (1991), starring Johnny Depp, Faye Dunaway and Jerry Lewis. Boasting exceptional performances--one of Dunaway's best in years and one of Lewis' most impressive--the film ran into difficulty finding a US distributor and eventually debuted in theaters (albeit briefly) in 1995.

Kusturica collected his second Palme d'Or, as well as his best American reviews to that time, for "Underground", a film lamenting the death of Yugoslavia and spanning 50 years from the German invasion to the civil war. It also earned him the enmity of his fellow Bosnians. Opening with the ironic but undeniably nostalgic title "Once upon a time there was a country, and its capital was Belgrade," it featured Serb protagonists, causing some to view it as an apologia for Serb leader Slobodan Milosevic's vision of a Serb-dominated Yugoslavia made at a time when a true Bosnian should have been documenting Serbian atrocities against his countrymen. Kusturica's reaction to the criticism was to abandon filmmaking, but he later rescinded his retirement, eventually directing "Black Cat, White Cat" (1998), in which he returned to his passion for gypsy culture. Containing hardly a hint of politics, this prodigiously well-made, frenetic mixture of slapstick and folklore is Kusturica's funniest film yet, brimming with colorful, larger-than-life characters portrayed by a cast that once again included many non-professionals.

  • Born:
    November 24, 1954 in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Job Titles:
    Director, Screenwriter, Actor, Bass player, Lyricist
Family
  • Son: Stribor Kusturica. born c. 1978; plays drums in the agit-rock band Zabranjeno Pusenje (No Smoking), in which his father used to play bass
Education
  • FAMU, Prague, Czechoslovakia, film direction, 1978
Milestones
  • 1976 Directed student film, Guernica
  • 1978 First TV-movie, The Brides Are Coming
  • 1981 Feature directorial debut Do You Remember Dolly Bell? ; also co-scripted with Muslim poet Abdulah Sidran
  • 1985 When Father Was Away on Business (scripted by Sidran) won the Palme d Or at Cannes Film Festival
  • 1987 Co-scripted (with Mladen Mareric) Zlatco Lavanic s The Magpie Strategy
  • 1988 Began teaching film directing at Columbia University
  • 1988 Composer Goran Bregovic provided haunting music for Time of the Gypsies ; co-scripted with Gordon Mihic
  • 1991 Bregovic-Iggy Pop songs were a distinctive feature of his English-language film Arizona Dream , starring Johnny Depp, Faye Dunaway and Jerry Lewis
  • 1995 Announced retirement from filmmaking in December
  • 1995 Won second Palme d Or for controversial Underground ; third and last collaboration with Bregovic
  • 1996 Rescinded retirement; announced he would return to filmmaking in spring 1997 with a comedy to star French actor Daniel Auteil; project eventually abandoned
  • 1998 Helmed Black Cat, White Cat , once again expressing his passion for gypsy culture; reteamed with screenwriter Gordon Mihic
  • 2000 Signed to make feature acting debut in Patrice Leconte s La Veuve de St. Pierre opposite Juliette Binoche
  • 2003 Cast in the comedy feature The Good Thief
  • Began making amateur films in high school
  • Professor of drama at Sarajevo Theater Academy

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