Chantal Akerman
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Female |
---|---|
Death | 9 years ago |
Date of birth | June 6,1950 |
Zodiac sign | Gemini |
Born | Brussels Agglomeration |
Belgium | |
Date of died | October 5,2015 |
Died | Paris |
France | |
Periods | Contemporary art |
Spouse | Sonia Wieder-Atherton |
Books | Family in Brussels |
Chantal Akerman | |
My Mother Laughs | |
Chantal Akerman: Self Portrait | |
Un divan | |
Chantal Akerman: Too Far, Too Close | |
Parents | Natalia Akerman |
Jacob Akerman | |
Siblings | Sylviane Akerman |
Full name | Chantal Anne Akerman |
Education | INSAS |
Nominations | Golden Lion |
Grand Jury Prize | |
Period by artworks | Contemporary art |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 411004 |
No Home Movie
I, You, He, She
Les Rendez- vous d'Anna
The Captive
From the East
Blow Up My Town
A Couch in New York
Golden Eighties
A Whole Night
Almayer's Folly
Hotel Monterey
La Chambre
Tomorrow We Move
Night and Day
From the Other Side
On Tour with Pina Bausch
Histoires d'Amerique: Food, Family and Philosophy
I'm Hungry, I'm Cold
Les années 80
Portrait of a Young Girl in the Late '60s, in Brussels
Chantal Akerman by Chantal Akerman
Down There
Never Forget
The State of the World
Sud
Le 15/8
Letters Home
Seven Women--seven Sins
Dis-moi
Hanging Out Yonkers
The Man with the Suitcase
Moving In
Tombée de nuit sur Shanghaï
Paris Seen By. . . 20 Years After
With Sonia Wieder-Atherton
Les trois dernières sonates de Franz Schubert
Porto
The Day When. . .
Room 666
Against Oblivion
She Spent So Many Hours Under the Sun Lamps
I Don't Belong Anywhere – The cinema of Chantal Akerman
Chantal Akerman, From Here
The Camera, I
Against Oblivion (Contre l'oubli)
5 % de risques
Je tu il Elle
News from Home
Chantal Akerman Life story
Chantal Anne Akerman was a Belgian film director, screenwriter, artist, and film professor at the City College of New York.
Jeanne Dielman: Film directed by woman picked as best ever
By Elsa MaishmanBBC News
A film directed by A Woman has been chosen as The Greatest of all time by a group of experts.
Jeanne Dielman, 23 quai du Commerce, 1080 Bruxelles, directed by Chantal Akerman , has topped The British Film Institute's Sight and Sound poll.
It is the First Time a work directed by A Woman has reached The Top ten. The poll, which runs every decade, has been criticised for a lack of diversity.
The winning spot was held for 40 Years by Orson Welles ' Citizen Kane .
It was overtaken in 2012 by Alfred Hitchcock 's Vertigo.
Jeanne Dielman, released in 1975, is The Story of a Belgian widow who turns to prostitution to make ends meet, but kills one of her clients. The Film runs for almost three and a Half Hours .
Though not as well-known outside The World of film criticism as previous winners, it has been lauded as a " masterpiece" and
Chantal Akerman , the Belgian Director , died in 2015 aged 65.
Lillian Crawford, a film critic and writer who contributed to the poll, said The Film was the " essential text" in feminist cinema.
" Jeanne Dielman isn't a film that I would say to someone getting into cinema 'Oh, this is The First film you absolutely must see', " she told The Bbc .
" I think if you're going to work through The List , maybe do it in reverse order and sort of build towards it, because it's quite an ask to invite people to see this.
" But in an academic sense and thinking about cinema and encouraging more people to seek out experimental film, films by women, and in terms of the history of feminist cinema, this is absolutely the sort of essential text. "
, Laura Mulvey , a professor of film studies at Birkbeck University, called the vote a " sudden shake-up".
" Things will never be the same, " she wrote.
The poll has been run by The British Film Institute's Sight and Sound magazine each decade since 1952.
It has faced criticism in The Past for a lack of diversity in The Experts polled and The List of 100 best films chosen.
In 2012, Jeanne Dielman was one of just two films directed by women which made it on to The List , along with one by a black Director - Djibril Diop Mambéty's Touki Bouki .
Over The Years The Number and diversity of people consulted have increased. This year, 1,639 critics, programmers, curators, archivists and academics were asked to choose their Top Ten films.
Last time's winner, Vertigo, claimed The Second spot, while Citizen Kane was third.
Yasujirō Ozu's Tokyo Story came fourth, followed by Wong Kar Wai's In The Mood for Love in fifth place.
Source of news: bbc.com