André Téchiné


Director, Screenwriter

About

Birth Place
France
Born
March 13, 1943

Biography

Wide-eyed country boy Andre Techine relocated to Paris from his provincial hometown in southwest France at the age of 19 and, though he did not gain admittance to his country's top film school, was soon writing movie reviews for the prestigious CAHIERS DU CINEMA. He made his directorial debut with "Pauline s'en va" (1969) and followed with "Souvenirs d'en France" (1976), while providing ...

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Biography

Wide-eyed country boy Andre Techine relocated to Paris from his provincial hometown in southwest France at the age of 19 and, though he did not gain admittance to his country's top film school, was soon writing movie reviews for the prestigious CAHIERS DU CINEMA. He made his directorial debut with "Pauline s'en va" (1969) and followed with "Souvenirs d'en France" (1976), while providing screenplays for other directors (i.e., Liliane Dekermadec's "Aloise" 1975). He demonstrated his flair for richly textured, atmospheric storytelling with the aptly titled thriller "Barocco" (1977), starring Gerard Depardieu and Isabelle Adjani, but faltered somewhat with the sluggish, well-crafted "The Bronte Sisters" (1978)--worthwhile mainly for the superlative performances of Isabelle Huppert, Marie-France Pisier and Adjani, as well as the sole dramatic outing of literary theorist Roland Barthes (a fan of Techine's) in the role of William Thackery. The director himself has said: "I think my first films were too theoretical. They were too inspired by cinema, and not by real life."

"Hotel des Ameriques/Hotel of the Americas" (1981) marked the first time Techine let his actors improvise, a practice he has continued ever since, adjusting his scripts to accommodate the new material. It was also his first time directing Catherine Deneuve, and three films later, having played unglamorous, matronly roles to stretch her repertoire, she was still enthusiastic about working with him: "There are some directors who are more feminine than others, like Techine, like Truffaut. They are an exceptional gift to actresses." Juliette Binoche found that out as the star of "Rendez-Vous" (1985), a stylishly engrossing tale of obsessive sexuality which earned him the Cannes Festival Best Direction Award. Binoche was outstanding in her first lead role as an innocent provincial girl who arrives in Paris to pursue a career in the theater. Given the choice of the apparently virginal Wadeck Stanczak and his seedy roommate Lambert Wilson (playing an actor in a sex show), she opts to indulge her hedonistic impulses with the fascinating, repelling Wilson, his eventual demise profoundly maturing the once carefree girl.

Techine's poignant coming-of-age saga "Les Roseaux sauvages/Wild Reeds" (1994) earned him Cesars for his direction and screenplay and took honors as Best Picture. His first film released in the USA (in 1995) and his most autobiographical picture to date (the sensitive Francois discovering he is gay clearly an alter ego for the helmer) centered on the inner turmoil of a trio of youngsters at a provincial boarding school in 1962 and evoked the effect the Algerian War had on rural France. As Francois' platonic best friend Maite, Elodie Bouchez was nothing short of a revelation, garnering a Cesar as Most Promising Newcomer--Female. For his next two features released in the USA, Techine guided Deneuve to her most self-revelatory performances in years. "Ma Saison preferee/My Favorite Season" (1993, released in USA in April 1996) cast her and Daniel Auteuil as estranged siblings forced together by the decline of their ailing mother, while "Les Voleurs/Thieves" (1996), using the crime genre as a starting point, paired them in a "Rashomon"-style exploration of family and amorous ties. Techine's "Alice and Martin" (1998), a haunting love story between two emotionally damaged outsiders, reteamed him with Binoche, whose subtly nuanced performance as she moved from insecurity to almost obsessive purpose lent a dignity to her character that was the abiding memory of the film.

Filmography

 

Director (Feature Film)

The Girl on the Train (2010)
Director
The Witnesses (2007)
Director
Changing Times (2005)
Director
Strayed (2004)
Director
A CONVERSATION WITH EMMANUELLE BEART (2004)
Director
Loin (2001)
Director
Alice and Martin (1998)
Director
Les Voleurs (1996)
Director
Ma saison préférée (1996)
Director
Wild Reeds (1994)
Director
J'embrasse pas (1991)
Director
Les Innocents (1988)
Director
Rendez-vous (1987)
Director
Le Lieu du Crime (1986)
Director
La Matiouette (1982)
Director
Hotel des Ameriques (1982)
Director
Les Soeurs Bronte (1979)
Director
The Bronte Sisters (1978)
Director
Barocco (1976)
Director
Souvenirs d'en France (1975)
Director

Assistant Direction (Feature Film)

The Sky Above Paris (1991)
Assistant Director

Cast (Feature Film)

40X15: Forty Years of the Directors' Fortnight (2008)
Les Ministeres de l'art (1988)
Himself

Writer (Feature Film)

The Girl on the Train (2010)
Screenplay
The Witnesses (2007)
Screenplay
Changing Times (2005)
Screenplay
Strayed (2004)
Screenplay (Adaptation)
Loin (2001)
Screenwriter
Beach Cafe (2001)
Screenwriter
Alice and Martin (1998)
Screenwriter
Les Voleurs (1996)
Screenwriter
Ma saison préférée (1996)
Screenwriter
Wild Reeds (1994)
Screenwriter
J'embrasse pas (1991)
Screenplay
Mauvaise Fille (1991)
Screenwriter
J'embrasse pas (1991)
Adaptation And Dialogue
Les Innocents (1988)
Screenwriter
Rendez-vous (1987)
Screenplay
Le Lieu du Crime (1986)
Writer (Adaptation)
Le Lieu du Crime (1986)
Writer (Dialogue)
Le Lieu du Crime (1986)
Screenplay
Hotel des Ameriques (1982)
Screenplay
The Bronte Sisters (1978)
Screenplay
Barocco (1976)
Screenwriter
Aloise (1975)
Screenplay
Souvenirs d'en France (1975)
Screenwriter

Producer (Feature Film)

La Californie (2006)
Producer

Music (Feature Film)

Les Innocents (1988)
Lyrics

Film Production - Main (Feature Film)

Full Speed (1996)
Technical Advisor

Misc. Crew (Feature Film)

Les Ministeres de l'art (1988)
Other

Life Events

1962

Moved to Paris from home in southwest France at the age of 19

1969

Directorial debut, "Paulina s'en va" (not released until 1975)

1973

Made uncredited acting appearance in Jean Eustache's "The Mother and the Whore"

1975

Co-wrote (with director) the screenplay for Liliane Dekermadec's "Aloise"; first association with Isabelle Huppert

1976

Scripted and helmed "Barocco" starring Gerard Depardieu and Isabelle Adjani

1978

Directed "The Bronte Sisters" starring Adjani and Huppert; co-wrote with Pascal Bonitzer and Jean Gruault

1982

First film with Catherine Deneuve, "Hotel des Ameriques/Hotel of the Americas"

1985

Won the Cannes Festival Best Direction Award for "Rendez-Vous" starring Juliette Binoche; co-wrote with Cahiers du Cinema critic Olivier Assayas

1986

Reteamed with Deneuve for "Le Lieu de crime/The Scene of the Crime"; second screenplay collaboration with Bonitzer

1993

First film with actor Daniel Auteuil, "Ma saison preferee/My Favorite Season"; also co-starred Deneuve (US release in 1996)

1994

Scored big hit with "Les Roseaux sauvages/Wild Reeds" winning Cesars for direction and screenplay (first film released in the US)

1996

Reteamed with Deneuve and Auteuil for "Les Voleurs/Thieves"; fifth screenplay on which Techine shared credit with Bonitzer

1998

Reteamed with Binoche for "Alice and Martin" (released in the US in 1999)

2001

Helmed the feature "Loin/Far" (shot in digital video)

2003

Directed the feature adaptation, "Strayed/Les égarés" based on the novel, Le Garçon aux yeux gris by Gilles Perrault

2004

Helmed the Morocco-set drama, "Changing Times/Les temps qui changent" starring Deneuve and Depardieu

2007

Directed "The Witnesses/Les Témoins"; film is set in Paris in 1984, during the outbreak of AIDS

Bibliography