Philip Kaufman Movies
Born in Chicago, IL, writer/director
Philip Kaufman makes accessible American art films and stays out of the Los Angeles area, preferring the home base of San Francisco, working with his wife,
Rose, and his son
Peter. After studying at the University of Chicago and Harvard Law School, he taught English in Europe and began work on a novel. He got into filmmaking in the '60s after traveling to California to meet his literary mentor,
Henry Miller. His first two films were satirical comedies:
Goldstein, co-directed by
Benjamin Manaster, and
Fearless Frank, starring a young
Jon Voight. During the '70s he reworked several great American genres with the Western
The Great Northfield, Minnesota Raid, the whaling adventure
The White Dawn, the sci-fi thriller
Invasion of the Body Snatchers, and the coming-of-age drama
The Wanderers. During this time, he also received writing credits for the highly successful films
The Outlaw Josey Wales and
Raiders of the Lost Ark. In the '80s, he turned to literary adaptations and began to craft his signature style of so-called American European films.
The Right Stuff, adapted from
Tom Wolfe's novel about the astronauts of the
U.S. Mercury 7, didn't do that well at the box office but won four Academy Awards and remains a fan favorite. He made his masterpiece in 1988 with
The Unbearable Lightness of Being, adapted from the novel by
Milan Kundera and nominated by the Academy for Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Cinematography. As an intellectual art film embraced by American audiences, it also offers fine performances from leads
Daniel Day-Lewis,
Juliette Binoche, and
Lena Olin. After a lifelong passion for the work of
Henry Miller, Kaufman adapted autobiographical writings of
Anaïs Nin into the film
Henry & June, set in 1930s Paris. Despite fine production values and performances, the erotic drama had the unfortunate first-ever NC-17 rating. Kaufman briefly returned to mainstream commercial appeal with the
Michael Crichton adaptation
Rising Sun before heading out to Asia to help his son
Peter Kaufman with the documentary
China: The Wild East. In 2000, he directed the costume drama
Quills, based on the play by
Doug Wright depicting the incarceration of the
Marquis de Sade. It was nominated for three Oscars and won Best Picture from the National Board of Review. In 2003, he completed
The Blackout Murders, starring
Ashley Judd as a police detective who finds herself a suspect. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, Rovi