Alain Berliner Movies
As one of the few purveyors of magical realism in modern cinema, Belgian-born screenwriter/director
Alain Berliner has blurred the lines between fantasy and reality to sometimes touching effect in such features as
Ma Vie en Rose (
My Life in Pink, 1997) and
Le Mur (
The Wall, 1999). Though
Berliner was at first drawn to a career as a film director while a student at Brussels' INSAS, his perceived lack of rapport with actors led him to focus more on screenwriting, while also working in various capacities for such TF1 productions as Les Galettes de Maimie (1991) and Monsieur Victor (1993).
Berliner's screenplay for the hit Belgian comedy
Koko Flanel found his ability to paint vivid and interesting characters developing nicely, but he would gravitate back behind the camera for the shorts Le Jour de Chat and Rose.
His affectionately offbeat sensibilities sharper than ever,
Berliner next began work on the script that was also meant to serve as his feature directorial debut. That was not meant to be, however, since he was contacted by a French film executive who (based on the strength of Rose) saw
Berliner as the ideal candidate to direct a screenplay about an effeminate young boy who dreams of growing up to become a woman.
Berliner was struck by
Chris Vander Stappen's script for
Ma Vie en Rose, and the two were soon collaborating on revising the script in preparation for filming. Debuting in late March of 1997 to rave reviews from critics and overwhelmingly positive reactions from audiences,
Ma Vie en Rose told a sensitive story in an original and compelling way. In addition to taking the Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Film,
Ma Vie en Rose received recognition at the BAFTA Awards and the César Awards, and earned
Berliner and
Vander Stappen a Best Screenwriting award at that year's Eurpoean Film Awards. If
Berliner had previously doubted his ability to coax winning performances from his actors, it seemed that his talents behind the camera had finally caught up with his writing skills.
It didn't take
Berliner long to begin work on his feature follow-up, and in 1999, he wrote and directed the surrealistic comedy drama
The Wall. In the unconventional tale, a man named Albert (
Daniel Hanssens), who owns a take-out food restaurant, is shocked one day to find that a wall has been erected to separate the Flemish and French speaking populations -- and that it just happens to run right through the middle of his business. The film didn't perform quite as well as
Berliner's previous effort, and the following year, he was back in the director's chair for the elliptical
Demi Moore drama
Passion of Mind (2000). A psychological drama that found
Berliner eschewing writing duties,
Passion of Mind detailed the split existence of a woman who yearns to bring her two lives together. An interesting concept that was generally faulted for weak execution, the film flew under the radar of worldwide audiences before making its stateside debut on home video. Back on the small screen,
Berliner once again pulled double duty on the made-for-television drama
La Maison du Canal (2003). ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi

- 2007
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- 2004
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- 2003
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- 2002
- R
- Add Red Siren to Queue
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Oliver Megaton's action thriller Red Siren, an adaptation of Maurice G. Dantec's La Sirene Rouge, concerns the unusual friendship that develops between a 12-year-old girl, Alice (Alexandra Negrao) and a jaded, 40-year-old hired killer, Hugo (Jean-Marc Barr), who finds, in her, a new lease on life. A group of bad guys are hunting the girl because of her evil mother - relentlessly trying to track her down. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Jean-Marc Barr, Alexandra Negrao, (more)

- 2002
- NR
Director Sam Garbarski marked his feature film directorial debut in 2003 with the family-comedy drama Le Tango des Rashevski (The Rashevski Tango), a tale of one extended family's struggle to find meaning and identity within their own somewhat dormant Jewish heritage. When 81-year-old family matriarch Rosa Rashevski passes away, her descendants are left unprepared, as they have no idea what traditional Jewish rites they should be practicing. As a result, various Rashevski begin some rather intense periods of spiritual introspection, ranging from Rosa's granddaughter Nina's (Tania Gabarski, daughter of the director) proclamation to start and raise a Jewish family to grandson -- and former Israeli military man -- Rica's (Rudi Rosenberg) turbulent relationship with his Muslim girlfriend, Khadija (Selma Kouchy). To further complicate matters, a non-Jewish family friend named Antoine (Hippolyte Girardot) shows up at the funeral and strikes up a conversation with Nina, whom he used to baby-sit when they were both younger. As he grows more fond of the young woman and becomes intent on making her his wife, he learns of her intentions to have a Jewish family and tries to find a solution that would make the young woman reconsider him as a suitor. ~ Ryan Shriver, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Hippolyte Girardot, Ludmila Mikael, (more)

- 2001
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- Add The Sweetest Sound (The Ultimate Name Game) to Queue
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Documentary filmmaker Alan Berliner has a name, just like everyone else, but he's not sure just what it's supposed to mean, and in this film he looks at his own moniker and those of a number of other people, as he tries to get to the bottom of the mystery of human names. Berliner humorously explores the heritage of his Christian name (depending on what language source you consult, "Alan" can mean "peace" or "rock"), interviews his short-tempered father about how he was named (he offers little useful insight), documents his own frustration when people confuse him with French filmmaker Alain Berliner, and even organizes a dinner party for 12 different men who share the name "Alan Berliner." Along the way, Alan also visits a society for women named Linda, studies which names were most popular in particular decades, and explores the myths and realities about how some immigrants had their names changed at Ellis Island. The Sweetest Sound was shown in competition at the 2001 Berlin Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Alan Berliner, Alain Berliner, (more)

- 2000
- PG13
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Demi Moore stars in this unusual psychological drama about two women caught between reality and imagination. Marie (Moore) is an American widow trying to raise two children under difficult circumstances in a small town in France. Marty (also played by Moore) is a successful businesswoman in New York City who wants to leave her busy life and lead a quieter existence in Europe. But Marty is just a product of Marie's imagination -- or at least that's what Marie thinks. Marty, on the other hand, is convinced that Marie is just someone she dreamed up. Who is right? Or are both of them wrong? And where does it leave the men in their lives (Stellan Skarsgard and William Fichtner)? Passion of Mind was the first English-language film from French director Alain Berliner, best known for the arthouse success Ma Vie en Rose. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Demi Moore, Stellan Skarsgård, (more)

- 1998
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Belgian director Alain Berliner, who made the popular Ma Vie en Rose (1997), followed with this French comedy-drama (another in the Collection 2000 series of movies about the Millennium). In the year 2000, a wall is erected at Belgian's "linguistic border," separating Flemish and French-speaking sides. It lands right in the middle of a French take-out-food shop run by Albert (Daniel Hanssens), who speaks both languages. Shakespearean touches include the ghost of Albert's father (Mil Seghers) and a Romeo and Juliet theme as evidenced by the Flemish girlfriend, Wendy (Pascale Bal), of Albert's son. Shown at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival. ~ Bhob Stewart, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Daniel Hanssens, Mil Seghers, (more)

- 1997
- R
- Add Ma Vie en Rose to Queue
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Boys will be boys and girls will be girls, but one child isn't so sure in this Belgian comedy drama. 7-year-old Ludovic (Georges DuFresne) is happy, healthy, and good-natured, but there's a bit of a problem -- he has decided that he's a girl. While his parents Hanna (Michele Laroque) and Pierre (Jean-Philippe Ecoffey) try to understand, Ludovic stubbornly refuses to listen to reason from his parents, teachers, or schoolmates. His fondness for wearing girl's clothes and frequent pronouncements to strangers that he's going to be a woman when he grows up become increasingly worrying, and things come to a head when Ludovic declares that when he's older, he plans to marry Jerome (Julien Riviere), the boy next door. It hardly helps that Pierre's boss, Albert (Daniel Hanssens), is also Jerome's father, and that he's notoriously closed-minded about gender issues. Will Pierre keep his job? Will the stress spoil Pierre and Hanna's marriage? And will Ludovic find the right shade of lipstick? Ma Vie En Rose was the first feature for director and screenwriter Alain Berliner. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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- Starring:
- Michèle Laroque, Jean-Philippe Ecoffey, (more)