- Jaco Van Dormael
Jaco Van Dormael (born 1957,
Ixelles ,Brussels ) is a Belgianfilm director ,screenwriter . andplaywright . His complex and critically acclaimed films are especially noted for their respectful and sympathetic portrayal of people with mental and physical disabilities.Biography
Jaco Van Dormael's birth was traumatic, as his
umbilical cord wound about his neck, nearly choking him. For a while, it was feared that this birth trauma would leave him mentally retarded, and knowing this may be partly responsible for his sympathetic portrayal of the mentally handicapped. He spent the first seven years of his childhood inGermany but eventually returned to Belgium.He delighted in working with children and for a while pursued a career as a
circus clown . As a children's entertainer, childhood and innocence would become strong themes throughout his work. In the 1980s, he became interested in filmmaking and produced a number ofshort film s that aroused considerable critical interest.Van Dormael made his feature-length debut in 1991 with "
Toto le Héros " ("Toto the hero"), an endearing tale about a man who believes his life was "stolen" from him when he was switched at birth, told in a complex mosaic of flashbacks anddream sequence s, sometimes with almost a stream of consciousness effect. "Toto le Héros" gained wide critical acclaim, winning both theCésar Award for best foreign film and theCamera d'Or at theCannes Film Festival , making Van Dormael something of an overnightcelebrity .Jaco Van Dormael's subsequent output as a screenwriter and as a director has been modest by
film industry standards, averaging about two films per decade. This is thought to reflect both his meticulous, almost perfectionist mode of operation and the difficulty in obtaining funding for the kinds of ambitious, challenging projects he seems to favor.Van Dormael uses a unique method to draft his screenplays, writing hundreds of ideas on index cards and then arranging them on several long tables placed end-to-end. This gives him the flexibility to rearrange concepts and see how they "fit."
His brother
Pierre Van Dormael is ajazz guitar ist and composer, and has scored his feature films.Themes
Van Dormael's films, while few, have strong common themes between them. They make distinctive use of naive
voiceover and examine the world from an innocent perspective (the young Thomas in "Toto", the mentally handicapped protagonist of "Huitieme Jour", and the unborn child of "Sur la Terre comme au Ciel"). These characters views are often colorful, imaginative, and somewhat removed from reality, with slight elements ofsurreal imagery used to illustrate their active imaginations.His movies also typically end with a death, which is portrayed not as a tragedy, but as a moving on where the deceased looks down happily at the world below. Van Dormael makes prominent use of nostalgic music, as well, featuring
Charles Trenet in "Toto" andLuis Mariano in "Huitieme Jour". "Sur la Terre" ends with a birth, but it is similarly handled the passing of a character into a new world.Both "Toto" and "Huitieme Jour" prominently featured characters with
Down Syndrome , and portrayed these characters lovingly, emphasizing their child-like characteristics.Filmography
Early shorts
* "Maedli la Brèche" (1980)
* "Stade 81" (1981)
* "L'Imitateur" (1982)
* "Sortie de Secours" (1983)
* "È Pericoloso Sporgersi" (1984)
* "De Boot" (1985)Feature films
* "
Toto le Héros " (1991; "Toto the Hero")
* "Sur la Terre comme au Ciel " (1992; "Between Heaven and Earth" [lit. "In Heaven as on Earth"] ; screenwriter only; directed byMarion Hänsel )
* "Le Huitième Jour " (1996; "The Eighth Day")
* "Mr. Nobody" (2008)
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