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John Boorman

Sir John Boorman CBE (/ˈbʊərmən/; born 18 January 1933) is a British filmmaker. He is best known for directing feature films such as Point Blank (1967), Hell in the Pacific (1968), Deliverance (1972), Zardoz (1974), Exorcist II: The Heretic (1977), Excalibur (1981), The Emerald Forest (1985), Hope and Glory (1987), The General (1998), The Tailor of Panama (2001) and Queen and Country (2014).


John Boorman

Boorman at the San Sebastián International Film Festival in September 2006
Born (1933-01-18) 18 January 1933 (age 90)
OccupationFilmmaker
Years active1962–present
Spouse(s)
Christel Kruse
(m. 1956⁠–⁠1990)

Isabella Weibrecht
(m. 1995, divorced)
Children7 (1 deceased), including Charley Boorman and Katrine Boorman

Boorman has directed 22 films and received five Academy Award nominations, twice for Best Director (for Deliverance, and Hope and Glory). He is also credited with creating the first Academy Award screeners to promote The Emerald Forest.[1] In 2004, Boorman received the BAFTA Fellowship for lifetime achievement from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts. In January 2022, Boorman received a knighthood.

Early life

Boorman was born in Shepperton, Middlesex, England, the son of pub landlord George Boorman and his wife Ivy (née Chapman). George Boorman was of Dutch parentage.[2][3] He was educated at the Salesian School in Chertsey, Surrey.

Career

Boorman was conscripted for military service and became a clerical instructor in the British Army. He did not serve in the Korean War,[4] but once faced court-martial for "seducing a soldier from the course of his duty" by criticising the war to his trainees; this was abandoned when Boorman showed that The Times was the source of all his comments.[5] After Army service he worked as a drycleaner and journalist in the late 1950s. He ran the newsrooms at Southern Television in Southampton and Dover before moving into television documentary filmmaking, eventually becoming head of the BBC's Bristol-based Documentary Unit.[6] In 1963 he wrote and directed a documentary about professional football, "Six Days to Saturday" which focused on a week in the life of Swindon Town, who were then in England's second division.[7]

Having caught the attention of a producer, David Deutsch, Boorman was offered the chance to direct a film aimed at repeating the success of A Hard Day's Night (directed by Richard Lester in 1964): Catch Us If You Can (1965) is about another pop group, the Dave Clark Five. While it was not as successful commercially as Lester's film was, it drew good reviews from distinguished critics such as Pauline Kael and Dilys Powell, and smoothed Boorman's way into the film industry.

Boorman was drawn to Hollywood for the opportunity to make larger-scale films and in Point Blank (1967), based on a novel by Richard Stark ( a pen name of Donald E. Westlake), he brought a stranger's vision to the decaying fortress of Alcatraz and the proto-hippy world of the West Coast of the United States. Lee Marvin gave the then-unknown director his full support, telling MGM that he deferred all his approvals on the project to Boorman.

After Point Blank, Boorman worked with Lee Marvin and Toshiro Mifune on the robinsonade of Hell in the Pacific (1968), which tells a fable of two representative soldiers stranded together on an island.

After returning to the United Kingdom, Boorman made Leo the Last (US/UK, 1970). This film exhibited the influence of Federico Fellini and even starred a Fellini regular, Marcello Mastroianni. It won Boorman a Best Director award at the Cannes Film Festival.

Boorman achieved much greater resonance with Deliverance (US, 1972, adapted from a novel by James Dickey), depicting the ordeal of four urban men, played by Jon Voight, Burt Reynolds, Ronny Cox and Ned Beatty, who encounter danger from an unexpected quarter while whitewater-rafting through the Appalachian backwoods. The film became Boorman's first true box office success and earned him several award nominations.

 
Boorman in 1974

At the beginning of the 1970s, Boorman planned to film The Lord of the Rings and corresponded about his plans with the author, J. R. R. Tolkien. Ultimately the production proved too costly, though some elements and themes can be seen in Excalibur (1981).

A wide variety of films followed. Zardoz (1974), starring Sean Connery, is a post-apocalyptic science fiction piece, set in the 23rd century where sex is divided into two worlds. According to the director's film commentary, the "Zardoz world" is on a collision course with an "effete" eternal society.

Boorman was selected as director for Exorcist II: The Heretic (USA, 1977), a move that surprised the industry given his dislike of the original film. Boorman declared: "Not only did I not want to do the original film, I told the head of Warner Brothers, John Calley, [that] I'd be happy if he didn't produce the film too."[8] The original script by a Broadway playwright, William Goodhart, was intellectual and ambitious, being concerned with the metaphysical nature of the battle between good and evil, and influenced by the writings of Catholic theologian Pierre Teilhard De Chardin,[8] "I found It extremely compelling. It was based on Chardin's intoxicating idea that biological evolution was the first step In God's plan, starting with inert rock, and culminating in humankind."[9] Despite Boorman's continued rewriting throughout shooting, the film was rendered incomprehensible. The film, released in June 1977, was a critical disaster but a moderate box office success. Boorman was denounced by William Peter Blatty, the author of the original novel The Exorcist, and by William Friedkin, director of the first Exorcist film. Boorman later admitted that his approach to the film was a mistake. The Heretic is often considered not just the worst film of The Exorcist series, but one of the worst films of all time.

Excalibur, a long-held dream project of Boorman's, is a retelling of the Arthurian legend, based on Le Morte D'Arthur. Boorman cast Nicol Williamson and Helen Mirren over their protests, as the two disliked each other intensely, but Boorman felt that their mutual antagonism would enhance their presentations0of the characters they were playing. The production was based in the Republic of Ireland, where Boorman had settled. For the film he employed all of his children as actors and crew (several of Boorman's later films have also been "family business" productions). The film, one of the first to be produced by Orion Films, was a moderate success.

The Emerald Forest (1985) saw Boorman cast his son Charley Boorman as an eco-warrior in a rainforest adventure that included commercially required elements – action and near-nudity – with authentic[citation needed] anthropological detail. Rospo Pallenberg's original screenplay was adapted into a book of the same name by award-winning author Robert Holdstock. Because the film's distributor faced business troubles that year, the film did not receive a traditional "For Your Consideration" advertising campaign for the 1985 Academy Awards, despite positive critical reviews. Boorman took the initiative to promote the film himself by making VHS copies available for no charge to Academy members at several Los Angeles-area video rental stores. Boorman's idea later became ubiquitous during Hollywood's award season, and by the 2010s, more than a million Oscar screeners were mailed to Academy members each year. However, Emerald Forest itself received no nominations from Boorman's strategy.[1]

Hope and Glory (1987, UK) is his most autobiographical movie to date, a retelling of his childhood in London during The Blitz. Produced by Goldcrest Films, with Hollywood financing the film, it proved a box office hit in the US, receiving numerous Oscar, BAFTA and Golden Globe nominations. However, his 1990 US-produced comedy about a dysfunctional family, Where the Heart Is, was a major flop.

When his friend David Lean died in 1991, Boorman was announced to be taking over direction of Lean's long-planned adaptation of Nostromo, though the production collapsed. Beyond Rangoon (US, 1995) and The Tailor of Panama (US/Ireland, 2000) both explore unique worlds with alien characters stranded and desperate.

Boorman won the Best Director Award at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival for The General,[10] his biopic of Martin Cahill. The film is about a glamorous, yet mysterious, criminal in Dublin who was killed, apparently by the Provisional Irish Republican Army. Boorman himself had been one of Cahill's burglary victims, having the gold record awarded for the score to Deliverance stolen from his home.

Released in 2006, his The Tiger's Tail was a thriller set against the tableau of early 21st century capitalism in Ireland. At the same time, Boorman began work on a long-time pet project of his, a fictional account of the life of Roman Emperor Hadrian (entitled Memoirs of Hadrian), written in the form of a letter from a dying Hadrian to his successor. In the meantime, a re-make/re-interpretation of the classic The Wonderful Wizard Of Oz with Boorman at the helm was announced in August 2009.[11]

In 2007 and 2009 he took part in a series of events and discussions as part of the Arts in Marrakech Festival along with his daughter Katrine Boorman including an event with Kim Cattrall called 'Being Directed'.

In November 2012 he was selected as a President of the main competition jury at the 2012 International Film Festival of Marrakech.

In Autumn 2013 Boorman began shooting Queen and Country, the sequel to his 1987 Oscar-nominated Hope and Glory, using locations in Shepperton and Romania. The film was selected to be screened as part of the Directors' Fortnight section of the 2014 Cannes Film Festival.[12]

John Boorman's debut novel, Crime of Passion, was published in 2016 (by Liberties Press, Dublin), with a French-language edition published by Marest in 2017.[13]

Personal life

Boorman was a longtime resident of Ireland and lived in Annamoe, County Wicklow, close to the Glendalough twin lakes.[14] In 2022, he put his property up for sale, intending to move to Surrey, England, where his son Charley lives.[15] According to a 2012 interview, he was recently divorced.[16] By 2020, he was married to his third wife.[17]

He has seven children: Katrine (b. 1958), Telsche (1959-1996), Charles (b. 1966), and Daisy (b. 1966) with his first wife, Christel Kruse, to whom he was married until 1990; and Lola, Lee, and Lily Mae with his second wife, Isabella Weibrecht, whom he married in 1995.[16][18]

His son, Charley Boorman, has a career as an actor but reached a wider audience when he and actor Ewan McGregor made a televised motorbike trip across Europe, Central Asia, Siberia, Alaska, Canada, and the Midwest US during 2004. His daughter Katrine Boorman (Igrayne in Excalibur) works as an actress in France. Another daughter, Telsche, co-wrote the screenplay for Where the Heart Is with Boorman.[19] She died of ovarian cancer in 1996 at the age of 36.[20][18][16] She had been married to the journalist Lionel Rotcage, the son of French singer Régine, and they had a daughter together.[21][18]

Boorman was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 1994 Birthday Honours for services to the film industry.[22] In 2004, Boorman was also made a Fellow of BAFTA. Boorman was knighted in the 2022 New Year Honours for services to film.[23][24][25]

Awards and nominations

Academy Awards

British Academy Film Awards

Cinema for Peace

  • The Cinema for Peace Award for the Most Valuable Film of the Year (2004) (In My Country) – Won

Golden Globe Awards

  • Best Director (1973) (Deliverance) – Nominated
  • Best Director (1988) (Hope and Glory) – Nominated
  • Best Screenplay (1988) (Hope and Glory) – Nominated

Partial filmography

Year Film Credited as Notes
Director Writer Producer Actor
1965 Catch Us If You Can Yes
1967 Point Blank Yes
1968 Hell in the Pacific Yes
1970 Leo the Last Yes Yes
1972 Deliverance Yes Yes Nominated—Academy Award for Best Picture
Nominated—Academy Award for Best Director
Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Best Director - Motion Picture
1974 Zardoz Yes Yes Yes
1977 Exorcist II: The Heretic Yes Yes
1981 Excalibur Yes Yes Yes
1985 The Emerald Forest Yes Yes
1987 Hope and Glory Yes Yes Yes Nominated—Academy Award for Best Picture
Nominated—Academy Award for Best Director
Nominated—Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay
Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Best Director - Motion Picture
Nominated—Golden Globe Award for Best Screenplay – Motion Picture
Nominated—BAFTA Award for Best Film
Nominated—BAFTA Award for Best Direction
Nominated—BAFTA Award for Best Original Screenplay
1990 Where the Heart Is Yes Yes Yes
1995 Beyond Rangoon Yes Yes
1995 Two Nudes Bathing Yes Yes Short film
Episode of Picture Windows, a miniseries on Showtime
1998 Lee Marvin: A Personal Portrait by John Boorman Yes
1998 The General Yes Yes Yes
2001 The Tailor of Panama Yes Yes Yes
2004 In My Country Yes Yes Won—The Cinema for Peace Award for the Most Valuable Film of the Year[26]
2006 The Tiger's Tail Yes Yes Yes
2014 Queen and Country Yes Yes Yes

Bibliography

  • Boorman, John, with Bill Stair (1974) Zardoz (novel)
  • Boorman, John (1985). Money into Light: The Emerald Forest: A Diary. London: Faber and Faber.
  • Boorman, John (1992). "Bright Dreams, Hard Knocks: A Journal for 1991". Projections: A Forum for Film Makers. London: Faber and Faber. ISBN 9780571168286.
  • Boorman, John (2003). Adventures of a Suburban Boy. London: Faber and Faber.
  • Boorman, John (2016). Crime of Passion. Liberties Press.
  • Boorman, John (2020). Conclusions. London: Faber and Faber. ISBN 978-0-5713-5379-8.

References

  1. ^ a b Miller, Daniel (1 March 2018). "The Oscar screener was invented by accident, and other secrets of an awards season staple". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 13 March 2018. "The Emerald Forest" didn't get any Oscar nominations – but Boorman's gambit made an impact: He effectively invented the movie screener, now an integral part of Hollywood's awards season apparatus.
  2. ^ World Film Directors, vol. 2, ed. John Wakeman, H. W. Wilson, 1988, p. 141
  3. ^ "John Boorman Biography (1933-)". www.filmreference.com. Retrieved 1 October 2020.
  4. ^ Essman, Scott (2 March 2015). "Director John Boorman Returns to his Youth with Queen And Country". btlnews.com. Retrieved 19 January 2022.
  5. ^ David Lodge, 'John Boorman's Quest' in Lives in Writing (Random House, 2014).
  6. ^ Russell, Patrick. "Citizen 63 (1963)". screenonline.org.uk. Retrieved 19 January 2022.
  7. ^ "Six Days to Saturday". BBC Archive. Retrieved 21 May 2022.
  8. ^ a b Pallenberg, Barbara (18 August 1977). The Making of Exorcist II: The Heretic (1st ed.). New York: Warner Books. ISBN 9780446893619.
  9. ^ Boorman, John (4 September 2003). Adventures of a Suburban Boy (Main ed.). London; New York: Faber & Faber. ISBN 9780571216956.
  10. ^ "Festival de Cannes: The General". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2 October 2009.
  11. ^ "John Boorman – A very English visionary is back". Article in The Independent. London. 21 August 2009. Retrieved 28 April 2010.
  12. ^ "Cannes Directors' Fortnight 2014 lineup unveiled". Screendaily. Retrieved 26 April 2014.
  13. ^ "Tapis écarlate". Retrieved 1 October 2020.
  14. ^ Flynn, Arthur. The Story of Irish Film, Currach Press, 2005; ISBN 978-1-85607-914-3, p. 131.
  15. ^ "John Boorman's Wicklow home, where Sean Connery and Lee Marvin came for dinner, for sale after 50 years for €2.75m". The Irish Times. Retrieved 21 April 2023.
  16. ^ a b c Adams, Mark (22 May 2012). "Me And Me Dad". Screendaily.com. Retrieved 16 June 2015.
  17. ^ Clarke, Donald. "John Boorman: 'I have to take a measure of blame for Harvey Weinstein'". The Irish Times. Retrieved 21 August 2020.
  18. ^ a b c "Director John Boorman: A life of love, loss and film". belfasttelegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 21 August 2020.
  19. ^ "AFI|Catalog". catalog.afi.com. Retrieved 21 April 2023.
  20. ^ tombstone Pere Lachaise Cemetery
  21. ^ "Obsèques Mort : Lionel ROTCAGE : avis de décès". www.avis-de-deces.com (in French). Retrieved 21 April 2023.
  22. ^ "No. 53696". The London Gazette (Supplement). 10 June 1994. p. 9.
  23. ^ "No. 63571". The London Gazette (Supplement). 1 January 2022. p. N2.
  24. ^ "New Year Honours 2022: Lumley and Redgrave become dames". BBC News. 31 December 2021. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
  25. ^ "New year honours feature Covid experts with Chris Whitty knighted". TheGuardian.com. 31 December 2021.
  26. ^ "GandhiServe Foundation - Mahatma Gandhi Research and Media Service". gandhiserve.org. Retrieved 1 October 2020.

Further reading

External links

  •   Media related to John Boorman at Wikimedia Commons
  • John Boorman at IMDb
  • John Boorman at the BFI's Screenonline

john, boorman, this, article, about, filmmaker, cricketer, cricketer, ʊər, born, january, 1933, british, filmmaker, best, known, directing, feature, films, such, point, blank, 1967, hell, pacific, 1968, deliverance, 1972, zardoz, 1974, exorcist, heretic, 1977,. This article is about the filmmaker For the cricketer see John Boorman cricketer Sir John Boorman CBE ˈ b ʊer m e n born 18 January 1933 is a British filmmaker He is best known for directing feature films such as Point Blank 1967 Hell in the Pacific 1968 Deliverance 1972 Zardoz 1974 Exorcist II The Heretic 1977 Excalibur 1981 The Emerald Forest 1985 Hope and Glory 1987 The General 1998 The Tailor of Panama 2001 and Queen and Country 2014 SirJohn BoormanCBEBoorman at the San Sebastian International Film Festival in September 2006Born 1933 01 18 18 January 1933 age 90 Shepperton Middlesex EnglandOccupationFilmmakerYears active1962 presentSpouse s Christel Kruse m 1956 1990 wbr Isabella Weibrecht m 1995 divorced wbr Children7 1 deceased including Charley Boorman and Katrine BoormanBoorman has directed 22 films and received five Academy Award nominations twice for Best Director for Deliverance and Hope and Glory He is also credited with creating the first Academy Award screeners to promote The Emerald Forest 1 In 2004 Boorman received the BAFTA Fellowship for lifetime achievement from the British Academy of Film and Television Arts In January 2022 Boorman received a knighthood Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Personal life 4 Awards and nominations 5 Partial filmography 6 Bibliography 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life EditBoorman was born in Shepperton Middlesex England the son of pub landlord George Boorman and his wife Ivy nee Chapman George Boorman was of Dutch parentage 2 3 He was educated at the Salesian School in Chertsey Surrey Career EditBoorman was conscripted for military service and became a clerical instructor in the British Army He did not serve in the Korean War 4 but once faced court martial for seducing a soldier from the course of his duty by criticising the war to his trainees this was abandoned when Boorman showed that The Times was the source of all his comments 5 After Army service he worked as a drycleaner and journalist in the late 1950s He ran the newsrooms at Southern Television in Southampton and Dover before moving into television documentary filmmaking eventually becoming head of the BBC s Bristol based Documentary Unit 6 In 1963 he wrote and directed a documentary about professional football Six Days to Saturday which focused on a week in the life of Swindon Town who were then in England s second division 7 Having caught the attention of a producer David Deutsch Boorman was offered the chance to direct a film aimed at repeating the success of A Hard Day s Night directed by Richard Lester in 1964 Catch Us If You Can 1965 is about another pop group the Dave Clark Five While it was not as successful commercially as Lester s film was it drew good reviews from distinguished critics such as Pauline Kael and Dilys Powell and smoothed Boorman s way into the film industry Boorman was drawn to Hollywood for the opportunity to make larger scale films and in Point Blank 1967 based on a novel by Richard Stark a pen name of Donald E Westlake he brought a stranger s vision to the decaying fortress of Alcatraz and the proto hippy world of the West Coast of the United States Lee Marvin gave the then unknown director his full support telling MGM that he deferred all his approvals on the project to Boorman After Point Blank Boorman worked with Lee Marvin and Toshiro Mifune on the robinsonade of Hell in the Pacific 1968 which tells a fable of two representative soldiers stranded together on an island After returning to the United Kingdom Boorman made Leo the Last US UK 1970 This film exhibited the influence of Federico Fellini and even starred a Fellini regular Marcello Mastroianni It won Boorman a Best Director award at the Cannes Film Festival Boorman achieved much greater resonance with Deliverance US 1972 adapted from a novel by James Dickey depicting the ordeal of four urban men played by Jon Voight Burt Reynolds Ronny Cox and Ned Beatty who encounter danger from an unexpected quarter while whitewater rafting through the Appalachian backwoods The film became Boorman s first true box office success and earned him several award nominations Boorman in 1974 At the beginning of the 1970s Boorman planned to film The Lord of the Rings and corresponded about his plans with the author J R R Tolkien Ultimately the production proved too costly though some elements and themes can be seen in Excalibur 1981 A wide variety of films followed Zardoz 1974 starring Sean Connery is a post apocalyptic science fiction piece set in the 23rd century where sex is divided into two worlds According to the director s film commentary the Zardoz world is on a collision course with an effete eternal society Boorman was selected as director for Exorcist II The Heretic USA 1977 a move that surprised the industry given his dislike of the original film Boorman declared Not only did I not want to do the original film I told the head of Warner Brothers John Calley that I d be happy if he didn t produce the film too 8 The original script by a Broadway playwright William Goodhart was intellectual and ambitious being concerned with the metaphysical nature of the battle between good and evil and influenced by the writings of Catholic theologian Pierre Teilhard De Chardin 8 I found It extremely compelling It was based on Chardin s intoxicating idea that biological evolution was the first step In God s plan starting with inert rock and culminating in humankind 9 Despite Boorman s continued rewriting throughout shooting the film was rendered incomprehensible The film released in June 1977 was a critical disaster but a moderate box office success Boorman was denounced by William Peter Blatty the author of the original novel The Exorcist and by William Friedkin director of the first Exorcist film Boorman later admitted that his approach to the film was a mistake The Heretic is often considered not just the worst film of The Exorcist series but one of the worst films of all time Excalibur a long held dream project of Boorman s is a retelling of the Arthurian legend based on Le Morte D Arthur Boorman cast Nicol Williamson and Helen Mirren over their protests as the two disliked each other intensely but Boorman felt that their mutual antagonism would enhance their presentations0of the characters they were playing The production was based in the Republic of Ireland where Boorman had settled For the film he employed all of his children as actors and crew several of Boorman s later films have also been family business productions The film one of the first to be produced by Orion Films was a moderate success The Emerald Forest 1985 saw Boorman cast his son Charley Boorman as an eco warrior in a rainforest adventure that included commercially required elements action and near nudity with authentic citation needed anthropological detail Rospo Pallenberg s original screenplay was adapted into a book of the same name by award winning author Robert Holdstock Because the film s distributor faced business troubles that year the film did not receive a traditional For Your Consideration advertising campaign for the 1985 Academy Awards despite positive critical reviews Boorman took the initiative to promote the film himself by making VHS copies available for no charge to Academy members at several Los Angeles area video rental stores Boorman s idea later became ubiquitous during Hollywood s award season and by the 2010s more than a million Oscar screeners were mailed to Academy members each year However Emerald Forest itself received no nominations from Boorman s strategy 1 Hope and Glory 1987 UK is his most autobiographical movie to date a retelling of his childhood in London during The Blitz Produced by Goldcrest Films with Hollywood financing the film it proved a box office hit in the US receiving numerous Oscar BAFTA and Golden Globe nominations However his 1990 US produced comedy about a dysfunctional family Where the Heart Is was a major flop When his friend David Lean died in 1991 Boorman was announced to be taking over direction of Lean s long planned adaptation of Nostromo though the production collapsed Beyond Rangoon US 1995 and The Tailor of Panama US Ireland 2000 both explore unique worlds with alien characters stranded and desperate Boorman won the Best Director Award at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival for The General 10 his biopic of Martin Cahill The film is about a glamorous yet mysterious criminal in Dublin who was killed apparently by the Provisional Irish Republican Army Boorman himself had been one of Cahill s burglary victims having the gold record awarded for the score to Deliverance stolen from his home Released in 2006 his The Tiger s Tail was a thriller set against the tableau of early 21st century capitalism in Ireland At the same time Boorman began work on a long time pet project of his a fictional account of the life of Roman Emperor Hadrian entitled Memoirs of Hadrian written in the form of a letter from a dying Hadrian to his successor In the meantime a re make re interpretation of the classic The Wonderful Wizard Of Oz with Boorman at the helm was announced in August 2009 11 In 2007 and 2009 he took part in a series of events and discussions as part of the Arts in Marrakech Festival along with his daughter Katrine Boorman including an event with Kim Cattrall called Being Directed In November 2012 he was selected as a President of the main competition jury at the 2012 International Film Festival of Marrakech In Autumn 2013 Boorman began shooting Queen and Country the sequel to his 1987 Oscar nominated Hope and Glory using locations in Shepperton and Romania The film was selected to be screened as part of the Directors Fortnight section of the 2014 Cannes Film Festival 12 John Boorman s debut novel Crime of Passion was published in 2016 by Liberties Press Dublin with a French language edition published by Marest in 2017 13 Personal life EditBoorman was a longtime resident of Ireland and lived in Annamoe County Wicklow close to the Glendalough twin lakes 14 In 2022 he put his property up for sale intending to move to Surrey England where his son Charley lives 15 According to a 2012 interview he was recently divorced 16 By 2020 he was married to his third wife 17 He has seven children Katrine b 1958 Telsche 1959 1996 Charles b 1966 and Daisy b 1966 with his first wife Christel Kruse to whom he was married until 1990 and Lola Lee and Lily Mae with his second wife Isabella Weibrecht whom he married in 1995 16 18 His son Charley Boorman has a career as an actor but reached a wider audience when he and actor Ewan McGregor made a televised motorbike trip across Europe Central Asia Siberia Alaska Canada and the Midwest US during 2004 His daughter Katrine Boorman Igrayne in Excalibur works as an actress in France Another daughter Telsche co wrote the screenplay for Where the Heart Is with Boorman 19 She died of ovarian cancer in 1996 at the age of 36 20 18 16 She had been married to the journalist Lionel Rotcage the son of French singer Regine and they had a daughter together 21 18 Boorman was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire CBE in the 1994 Birthday Honours for services to the film industry 22 In 2004 Boorman was also made a Fellow of BAFTA Boorman was knighted in the 2022 New Year Honours for services to film 23 24 25 Awards and nominations EditAcademy Awards Best Picture 1973 Deliverance Nominated Best Director 1973 Deliverance Nominated Best Picture 1988 Hope and Glory Nominated Best Director 1988 Hope and Glory Nominated Best Original Screenplay 1988 Hope and Glory NominatedBritish Academy Film Awards Best Film 1988 Hope and Glory Nominated Best Original Screenplay 1988 Hope and Glory Nominated BAFTA Fellowship 2004 WonCinema for Peace The Cinema for Peace Award for the Most Valuable Film of the Year 2004 In My Country WonGolden Globe Awards Best Director 1973 Deliverance Nominated Best Director 1988 Hope and Glory Nominated Best Screenplay 1988 Hope and Glory NominatedPartial filmography EditYear Film Credited as NotesDirector Writer Producer Actor1965 Catch Us If You Can Yes1967 Point Blank Yes1968 Hell in the Pacific Yes1970 Leo the Last Yes Yes1972 Deliverance Yes Yes Nominated Academy Award for Best PictureNominated Academy Award for Best DirectorNominated Golden Globe Award for Best Director Motion Picture1974 Zardoz Yes Yes Yes1977 Exorcist II The Heretic Yes Yes1981 Excalibur Yes Yes Yes1985 The Emerald Forest Yes Yes1987 Hope and Glory Yes Yes Yes Nominated Academy Award for Best PictureNominated Academy Award for Best DirectorNominated Academy Award for Best Original ScreenplayNominated Golden Globe Award for Best Director Motion PictureNominated Golden Globe Award for Best Screenplay Motion PictureNominated BAFTA Award for Best FilmNominated BAFTA Award for Best DirectionNominated BAFTA Award for Best Original Screenplay1990 Where the Heart Is Yes Yes Yes1995 Beyond Rangoon Yes Yes1995 Two Nudes Bathing Yes Yes Short film Episode of Picture Windows a miniseries on Showtime1998 Lee Marvin A Personal Portrait by John Boorman Yes1998 The General Yes Yes Yes2001 The Tailor of Panama Yes Yes Yes2004 In My Country Yes Yes Won The Cinema for Peace Award for the Most Valuable Film of the Year 26 2006 The Tiger s Tail Yes Yes Yes2014 Queen and Country Yes Yes YesBibliography EditBoorman John with Bill Stair 1974 Zardoz novel Boorman John 1985 Money into Light The Emerald Forest A Diary London Faber and Faber Boorman John 1992 Bright Dreams Hard Knocks A Journal for 1991 Projections A Forum for Film Makers London Faber and Faber ISBN 9780571168286 Boorman John 2003 Adventures of a Suburban Boy London Faber and Faber Boorman John 2016 Crime of Passion Liberties Press Boorman John 2020 Conclusions London Faber and Faber ISBN 978 0 5713 5379 8 References Edit a b Miller Daniel 1 March 2018 The Oscar screener was invented by accident and other secrets of an awards season staple Los Angeles Times Retrieved 13 March 2018 The Emerald Forest didn t get any Oscar nominations but Boorman s gambit made an impact He effectively invented the movie screener now an integral part of Hollywood s awards season apparatus World Film Directors vol 2 ed John Wakeman H W Wilson 1988 p 141 John Boorman Biography 1933 www filmreference com Retrieved 1 October 2020 Essman Scott 2 March 2015 Director John Boorman Returns to his Youth with Queen And Country btlnews com Retrieved 19 January 2022 David Lodge John Boorman s Quest in Lives in Writing Random House 2014 Russell Patrick Citizen 63 1963 screenonline org uk Retrieved 19 January 2022 Six Days to Saturday BBC Archive Retrieved 21 May 2022 a b Pallenberg Barbara 18 August 1977 The Making of Exorcist II The Heretic 1st ed New York Warner Books ISBN 9780446893619 Boorman John 4 September 2003 Adventures of a Suburban Boy Main ed London New York Faber amp Faber ISBN 9780571216956 Festival de Cannes The General festival cannes com Retrieved 2 October 2009 John Boorman A very English visionary is back Article in The Independent London 21 August 2009 Retrieved 28 April 2010 Cannes Directors Fortnight 2014 lineup unveiled Screendaily Retrieved 26 April 2014 Tapis ecarlate Retrieved 1 October 2020 Flynn Arthur The Story of Irish Film Currach Press 2005 ISBN 978 1 85607 914 3 p 131 John Boorman s Wicklow home where Sean Connery and Lee Marvin came for dinner for sale after 50 years for 2 75m The Irish Times Retrieved 21 April 2023 a b c Adams Mark 22 May 2012 Me And Me Dad Screendaily com Retrieved 16 June 2015 Clarke Donald John Boorman I have to take a measure of blame for Harvey Weinstein The Irish Times Retrieved 21 August 2020 a b c Director John Boorman A life of love loss and film belfasttelegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 21 August 2020 AFI Catalog catalog afi com Retrieved 21 April 2023 tombstone Pere Lachaise Cemetery Obseques Mort Lionel ROTCAGE avis de deces www avis de deces com in French Retrieved 21 April 2023 No 53696 The London Gazette Supplement 10 June 1994 p 9 No 63571 The London Gazette Supplement 1 January 2022 p N2 New Year Honours 2022 Lumley and Redgrave become dames BBC News 31 December 2021 Retrieved 3 January 2022 New year honours feature Covid experts with Chris Whitty knighted TheGuardian com 31 December 2021 GandhiServe Foundation Mahatma Gandhi Research and Media Service gandhiserve org Retrieved 1 October 2020 Further reading EditCiment Michel 1986 John Boorman London Faber and Faber External links Edit Media related to John Boorman at Wikimedia Commons John Boorman at IMDb John Boorman at the BFI s Screenonline Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Boorman amp oldid 1152620089, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

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