- Jean-Jacques Annaud is a French film director, screenwriter and producer, best known for directing Quest for Fire (1981), The Name of the Rose (1986), The Lover (1992), Seven Years in Tibet (1997) and Wolf Totem (2015). Annaud has received numerous awards for his work, including four César Awards, one David di Donatello Award, and one National Academy of Cinema Award. Annaud's first film, Black and White in Color (1976), received an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Movie Guy
- SpouseLaurence Duval Annaud (2 children)
- ChildrenLouise AnnaudJuliette Annaud
- ParentsPierre AnnaudMadeleine Annaud
- Frequently casts Ron Perlman.
- Used to be banned from entering China because of his film Seven Years in Tibet (1997). But years later, he was hired to direct the Chinese-French co-production Wolf Totem (2015) and had his ban lifted.
- Member of the 'Official Competition' jury at the 35th Cannes International Film Festival in 1982.
- Annaud uses a three-camera set-up since shooting Quest for Fire (1981). He employed the same shooting style on his TV miniseries The Truth About the Harry Quebert Affair (2018).
- He was sent to the French Cameroons as an Army Film Director by the National Service. During this period he trained locals to make their own movies while working on a series of educational films for the natives.
- Education: Vaugirard School; IDHEC, Paris; Sorbonne, Paris (literature).
- Enemy at the Gates (2001) is a film about duels and duality, about contrasts and extremes. The event is minuscule, but the propaganda makes it extremely important. Two individuals track each other in the midst of millions who are dying, but the focus is on these two. The smallest part is only one little piece of the large canvas, but it consequently becomes the central symbol of the whole.
- As a commercial director, you learn to direct actors and place a camera. But you don't learn how to tell a story. You learn how to be superficial.
- As a filmmaker I am only interested in the close-up - where I can dive into a character and see the emotions - or opening the screen as wide as I can to show a spectacle.
- The crew of Quest for Fire (1981) was international, and things went fine. The way I feel, I feel very French, but also I feel very good about being in America. Probably it's because I feel so French that I don't feel anything wrong about being different but rather love the experience. I think you may hate America when you don't speak the language, you don't understand the people, and you feel bad about your own culture. But I feel extremely good about French culture and extremely good about American culture. I love being here. I love my American friends. So I said to myself, why not try an international approach without trying to push aside my own culture, my past, or anything about me?
- [on China] When I go to Paris my heart sinks. I feel people aren't happy. They understand that their country is not what it was; that the lives of their children are not going to be as good as theirs. China is just the opposite. We still have a vision of China as very rigid, with officials who are like puppets. It's just the opposite! Under the uniform they are living creatures, full of joy! The new China is like Spain after Franco. Or America in the 1970s. People know they are going to run the world. [2013]
- The Lover (1992) - £1,100,000
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