Michael Winterbottom

A talented and intelligent British filmmaker of intense and often introspective relationship dramas, Michael Winterbottom studied film in Bristol and London after completing a degree in English at Oxford. He first worked in the industry when he got a job in the cutting room at Thames Television, and made the transition to director via two well-received documentaries, "Ingmar Bergman: The Magic Lantern" and "Ingmar Bergman: The Director" (both 1988), profiling the revered Swedish filmmaker. Winterbottom then formed a semi-regular working relationship with screenwriter Frank Cottrell Boyce when they teamed for a couple of youth-oriented TV comedy-dramas, beginning with "The Strangers" (1989), which received a BAFTA nomination as Best Educational Film. His fondness for quirky, personal projects, sometimes whimsical but often austere, featuring small casts enacting emotional and class struggles, continued via the road picture "Under the Sun" (1991) and the acclaimed "Love Lies Bleeding" (BBC2, 1992), also for TV.

Winterbottom did a good job helming installments of TV series, including the two-hour premiere of "Cracker" subtitled "The Mad Woman in the Attic" (Granada, 1993; aired in the US on A&E in 1994), and he also helmed the "Death at the Bar" episode for "The Inspector Alleyn Mysteries" (BBC/PBS, 1995). A breakthrough, though, came with his four-part serial, "Family" (BBC, 1994), an acclaimed study of a dysfunctional Irish working-class family written by Roddy Doyle. Some of Winterbottom's work, including an edited-down version of "Family", had played well at film festivals, but it was not until "Butterfly Kiss" (1995) that he made a film directly for feature release. An odd, often engaging and touching tale which revisits the road film genre in its mix of lesbian love and serial murder, it showed Winterbottom's promising talent for actors as well as his penchant for emotional extremes and flashy shock cuts. His stylish, personal and often socially committed touch also showed in his study of a multiple sclerosis victim, "Go Now" (1995).

A number of qualities which his work had manifested were present in his most ambitious undertaking to date, an adaptation of Thomas Hardy's bleak, difficult but rewarding novel "Jude the Obscure". Retitled "Jude" (1996), Winterbottom's film suggested his ongoing debts to Bergman and to Francois Truffaut, as well as his admirably restless if not always successful attempts at distancing effects. Very handsomely shot and produced, and featuring a mature star performance by Kate Winslet, the film was generally well-received, despite the challenges of its length, austerity and mixed ambitions. Winterbottom also set himself challenges anew with his present-day historical study of potent emotional bonds formed that are explored in "Welcome to Sarajevo" (1997). Debuting in competition at the Cannes Film Festival, the film received praise for its restrained, yet disturbing examination of the effects of war. In 2002, Winterbottom directed the musical drama "24 Hour Party People," a feature that intertwines music, sex, drugs and a lot of partying people.

  • Born:
    March 29, 1961 in Blackburn, Lancastershire, England
  • Job Titles:
    Director, Editor
Significant Others
  • Wife: Sabrina Broadbent. have two children together; divorced
  • Companion: . has lived with Winterbottom since c. 1986; mother of his two daughters
Milestones
  • 1988 First work as director: made two TV documentaries about Swedish filmmaker Ingmar Bergman, "Ingmar Bergman: The Magic Lantern" (for Channel 4) and "Ingmar Bergman: The Director" (for ITV)
  • 1989 First worked with screenwriter Frank Cottrell Boyce on the made-for-TV young adult dramas, "The Strangers" and "Forget About Me"
  • 1993 Directed opening two-hour TV-movie installment of the British crime drama series, "Cracker"; opening episode entitled "Cracker: The Mad Woman in the Attic"
  • 1994 Along with Andrew Eaton, formed production company, Revolution Films, in March, while "Family" was in post-production
  • 1994 Breakthrough work, and first TV miniseries work, the four-part BBC/RTE serial drama, "Family"; a two-hour pared-down version of the program also played at a number of film festivals
  • 1995 Directed first feature film, "Butterfly Kiss"
  • 1996 Helmed the underrated adaptation of "Jude", starring Christopher Eccleston and Kate Winslet
  • 1997 Directed the based-on-fact "Welcome to Sarajevo", an ironically titled film about a British journalist who develops a bond with a Bosnian child
  • 1999 Won praise for "Wonderland", which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival; released theatrically in the USA in 2000
  • 2000 Helmed "The Claim", an adaptation of "The Mayor of Casterbridge" set in 1860s California
  • 2002 Directed "24 Hour Party People", a drama about the British electronica musical group New Order
  • 2002 Helmed "Going Mad in Hollywood" (lensed 2002), a drama about filmmaker Lindsay Anderson's friendship with writer David Sherwin
  • 2004 Directed Tim Robbins and Samantha Morton in "Code 46" a futuristic love story
  • 2005 Directed "Tristram Shandy: A Cock and Bull Story" an adaptation of Laurence Sterne's essentially unfilmable novel, "The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman"
  • 2006 Helmed the controversal film "The Road to Guantanamo," the true story of three friends who set off from Britain for a wedding overseas and ended up as terrorist suspects in Guantanamo Bay
  • 2007 Helmed "A Mighty Heart," starring Angelina Jolie as Mariane Pearl, the wife of murdered journalist Daniel Pearl
  • First worked in the film and TV industries with a job in the cutting room at Thames Television
  • Grew up in Blackburn
  • Set to helm "Genova," a ghost story about a British man who moves his two American daughters to Genoa following the death of his wife (lensed 2007)

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