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Famous Like Me > Director > B > Nick Broomfield

Profile of Nick Broomfield on Famous Like Me

 
Name: Nick Broomfield  
   
Also Know As:
   
Date of Birth: 30th January 1948
   
Place of Birth: London, England, UK
   
Profession: Director
 
 
From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia
Nick Broomfield with his famous sound boom and half-on headphones.

Nicholas Broomfield (born January 30, 1948, in London, England) is a British documentary filmmaker. His father, Maurice, is a photographer. He films with the absolute minimum of crew: just himself and one or two cameramen. This gives his documentaries a distinctive style, Broomfield himself often in shot holding the sound boom.

Style of work

Early on, Broomfield's documentary style was very conventional Cinéma vérité, the juxtaposition of observed scenes. The filmmaker would not provide much explanation by way of voice-over or text, rather letting the film talk for itself.

It was not until Driving Me Crazy (1988) that Broomfield, already very much a known character in filmmaking, would appear on-screen for the first time. After several arguments regarding the budget and nature of the film, the filmmaker decided that he would only make the documentary if he was able to conduct a sort of experiment by filming the process of making the film - that is, the arguments, the failed interviews and the dead-ends.

It is for this reflexive filmmaking style - that is to say, a film being about the making of itself as much as about its subject - that Broomfield is most known. His influence on documentary is clear - Michael Moore, Louis Theroux and Morgan Spurlock have all adopted a similar style for their recent box-office hits. Filmmakers who use this style have been referred to as Les Nouvelles Egotistes.

He wrote the documentary Kurt and Courtney with Joan Churchill.

Films

  • Who Cares? (1971) Broomfield's first film, made as a student using a borrowed camera.
  • Proud to be British (1973)
  • Juvenile Liaison (1975)
  • Behind the Rent Strike (1979)
  • Whittingham (1980)
  • Fort Augustus (1981)
  • Soldier Girls (1981)
  • Tatooed Tears (1982)
  • Chicken Ranch (1983)
  • Lily Tomlin (1986)
  • Driving me Crazy (1988)
  • Diamond Skulls (1989)
  • The Leader, His Driver and the Driver's Wife (1991)
  • Aileen Wuornos: The Selling of a Serial Killer (1992)
  • Monster in a Box (1992)
  • Tracking Down Maggie (1994)
  • Heidi Fleiss: Hollywood Madam (1995)
  • Fetishes (1996)
  • Kurt and Courtney (1998)
  • Biggie & Tupac (2002)
  • Aileen: Life and Death of a Serial Killer (2003)

Other work

In 1999, Broomfield made a series of five commercials for Volkswagen. Each of these featured Broomfield with his trademark sound boom 'investigating' rumours about the soon-to-be released Volkswagen Passat.

Awards

  • British Academy Award (BAFTA)
  • Prix Italia
  • The Dupont Columbia Award for Outstanding Journalism
  • The Peabody
  • The Royal Television Society Award
  • First Prize, Sundance Film Festival
  • John Grierson Award
  • Robert Flaherty Award
  • The Hague Peace Prize
  • The Chris Award
  • The Blue Ribbon
  • The California State Bar Award
  • First Prize, Chicago Film Festival
  • First Prize, US Film Festival
  • First Prize, Festival of Mannheim
  • First Prize, Festival di Popoli
  • Special Jury Award, Melbourne Film Festival

Nick was also given a BAFTA tribute evening on March 8, 2005.

Current activity

Ghosts: Broomfield is currently working on a drama for Channel 4 inspired by the Morecambe Bay tragedy where 21 Chinese immigrant cockle pickers drowned after being cut off by the tides.

A Follow-up to The Leader...: Broomfield has also confirmed that he plans to record a follow-up to The Leader, His Driver and the Driver's Wife, showing the change in South Africa through the demise of Eugène Terre'Blanche.

This content from Wikipedia is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Nick Broomfield