List of frequent Claire Denis collaborators

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

see caption
Claire Denis (right) on the 66th Venice International Film Festival's photocall for White Material, which starred Isabelle Huppert (left) and Christopher Lambert (center). The film was their first and hitherto only collaboration.

filmmaker, screenwriter and occasional actress. Born in Paris, but raised in various parts of Africa, she made a career assisting other directors—primarily Costa-Gavras, Wim Wenders and Jim Jarmusch—before debuting with her own film, Chocolat, in 1988. She has since then made twelve feature films, three documentary films, in addition to several short films for anthology film series.[1]

Known for their elliptical and sensual style, her films are often analysed in terms of tactility, corporeality and otherness. Several of her films, including Chocolat, are set in former French colonies in Africa, and examine the tension between native Africans and French authority figures.[1]

Denis often works with the same actors and technicians, her artistic collaboration having been called "vital", "crucial", and a "keystone throughout her career".

director of photography Agnès Godard has shot almost every feature by Denis, and has said of the director that "[s]he has the faith and the belief that an association of ideas that's concise and that is based on pure cinematography — the choice of a frame, a focal point, the climate of the light — says something, and the idea that gluing those images together is going to create a sense."[3] Denis often collaborates with Jean-Pol Fargeau on her scripts.[4][5]

Her collaboration with

Stuart Staples of the Tindersticks has been particularly noted. The band has on occasion performed live renditions of their songs from Denis' oeuvre, accompanied by screenings of film clips. These live performances have been analysed as examples of Paul Ricœur's theory of discourse as performance.[2]

Key

Photograph of Vincent Gallo, peering into the camera lens with an intense and soulful gaze
Beatrice Dalle, wearing a midnight-blue camisole and white cardigan. She is stroking her hair with her left hand, while looking with a slightly vampiric grin off to her right. In the background are men in uniforms on a red carpet.
Isaach de Bankolé with goatee, wearing a dark blazer with white stripes, and looking slightly above the camera.
Denis has cast Vincent Gallo (left), Béatrice Dalle (center) and Isaach de Bankolé (right) in several of her films. Both Dalle and Gallo had worked with her in the 1990s, and appeared together in the horror film Trouble Every Day (2001). Bankolé played a supporting role in her début film, Chocolat (1988), and had a minor role in White Material (2009); both films were set in Africa.
Key Title Year
CH Chocolat 1988
NF No Fear, No Die 1990
KI Keep It for Yourself 1991
JR Jacques Rivette, le veilleur 1990
CS I Can't Sleep 1994
US US Go Home 1994
NB Nénette and Boni 1996
BT Beau Travail 1999
ED Trouble Every Day 2001
FN
Friday Night
2002
TI The Intruder 2004
35 35 Shots of Rum 2008
WM White Material 2009
BS Bastards 2013
LS Let the Sunshine In 2017
HL High Life 2018
BB Both Sides of the Blade 2022

Cast

Individual CH NF KI ICS US NB BT TED FN TI 35 WM BS LSI HL BB
Isaach de Bankolé Yes Yes Yes
Juliette Binoche Yes Yes Yes
Florence Loiret Caille Yes Yes Yes
Grégoire Colin Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Richard Courcet Yes Yes Yes
Béatrice Dalle Yes Yes Yes
Alex Descas Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Mati Diop Yes Yes
Nicole Dogué Yes Yes
Nicolas Duvauchelle Yes Yes Yes Yes
Hélène Fillières Yes Yes
Vincent Gallo Yes Yes Yes Yes
Katerina Golubeva
Yes Yes Yes
Laurent Grévill Yes Yes Yes
Alice Houri Yes Yes
Vincent Lindon Yes Yes Yes
Michel Subor Yes Yes Yes Yes
Valeria Bruni Tedeschi Yes Yes
Claire Tran Yes Yes Yes

Frequent collaborators include

Crew

Denis frequently collaborates with Jean-Pol Fargeau (script), Nelly Quettier (editing), Agnès Godard (cinematography) and Stuart A. Staples (soundtrack).[5][11]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Samantha Dinning, "Claire Denis," Senses of Cinema 50 (April 2009), accessed 1 September 2017.
  2. ^ a b Jenny Munro, Riffaterrean ungrammaticality and Ricoeurian discourse as performance in the films and collaborations of Claire Denis, PhD thesis, University of Glasgow, 2014.
  3. ^ Kristin Hohenadel, "The Image as Obsession, No Matter the Method," The New York Times, 28 September 2012.
  4. ^ José Teodoro, "No Sanctuary: Claire Denis on Bastards," Cinema Scope, accessed May 25, 2020.
  5. ^ a b c Alice Gregory, "The Fearless Cinema of Claire Denis," The New Yorker, May 21, 2018.
  6. ^ Jean-Luc Douin, "Florence Loiret-Caille en quête d'une Indonésie perdue," Le Monde, September 16, 2008, accessed May 25, 2020.
  7. Museum of the Moving Image
    , accessed May 25, 2020.
  8. Sight & Sound (April 15, 2018), British Film Institute
    , accessed May 25, 2020.
  9. ^ Simran Hans, "High Life first look: Claire Denis floats Juliette Binoche and Robert Pattinson in mortal space," Sight & Sound (December 28, 2018), British Film Institute, accessed May 25, 2020.
  10. ^ David Rooney, "Bastards: Cannes Review," The Hollywood Reporter, May 21, 2013, accessed May 25, 2020.
  11. Jump Cut: A Review of Contemporary Media
    , no. 54 (2012), accessed May 27, 2020.