Birthday: 1927-11-01
Place of Birth: Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Biography: Marcel Ophuls (German: [ˈɔfʏls]; born 1 November 1927) was a German-French documentary film maker and former actor, best known for his films The Sorrow and the Pity and Hôtel Terminus: The Life and Times of Klaus Barbie. Ophuls was born in Frankfurt, Germany, the son of Hildegard Wall and the director Max Ophüls. His family left Germany in 1933 following the coming to power of the Nazi Party and settled in Paris, France. Following the invasion of France by Germany in May 1940 they were forced to flee to the Vichy zone, remaining in hiding for over a year before crossing the Pyrenees into Spain in order to travel to the United States, arriving there in December 1941. Marcel attended Hollywood High School, then Occidental College, Los Angeles. He spent a brief period serving in a U.S. Army theatrical unit in Japan in 1946, then studied at the University of California, Berkeley. Ophuls became a naturalized citizen of France in 1938, and of the United States in 1950. When the family returned to Paris in 1950 Marcel became an assistant to Julien Duvivier and Anatole Litvak, and worked on John Huston's Moulin Rouge (1952) and his father's Lola Montès (1955). Through François Truffaut, Ophuls got to direct an episode of the portmanteau film Love at Twenty (1962). There followed the commercial hit Banana Peel (1964), a detective film starring Jeanne Moreau and Jean-Paul Belmondo. With a slump in box-office fortunes, Ophuls turned to television news reporting and a documentary on the Munich crisis of 1938: Munich (1967). He then embarked on his examination of France under Nazi occupation, The Sorrow and the Pity. Although he enjoyed making entertaining films, Ophuls became identified as a documentarian, using a characteristically sober interview style to resolve disparate experiences into a persuasive argument. A Sense of Loss (1972) looked at Northern Ireland, and The Memory of Justice (1973) was an ambitious comparison of US policy in Vietnam and the atrocities of the Nazis. Disagreements with his French backers over interpretation led Ophuls to smuggle a print to New York where it was shown privately. Legal wrangles left him disappointed and financially broke, and Ophuls turned to university lecturing. In the mid-1970s, he began producing documentaries for CBS and ABC. His feature documentary Hotel Terminus: The Life and Times of Klaus Barbie (1988) won an Academy Award; since then he has made an interview film with two senior East German Communists, November Days (1992) and a ruminative look at how journalists cover war, The Trouble We've Seen (1994). Every year the IDFA (International Documentary Festival) in Amsterdam screens an acclaimed filmmaker's ten favorite films. In 2007, Iranian filmmaker Maziar Bahari selected The Sorrow and the Pity for his top ten classics from the history of documentary. At the 65th Berlin International Film Festival in February 2015 Ophuls received the Berlinale Camera award for his life work.
Marcel Ophuls' riveting film details the heinous legacy of the Gestapo head dubbed "The Butcher of L...
View Movie
18 years after his last film, (The Troubles We've Seen), Marcel Ophuls emerges from retirement as on...
View Movie
In 2009, in a small theater in Geneva, Switzerland, the film directors Marcel Ophuls and Jean-Luc Go...
View Movie
Storyville's Nick Fraser meets German-French documentary film maker and former actor, Marcel Ophüls....
View Movie
Liberty Belle tells the story of a group of student's involvement with a group who oppose the French...
View Movie
Philippe Roger found the secretary of director Max Ophüls, Ulla de Colstoun, and Valere his first as...
View Movie
A 1965 episode of the French television program Cinéastes de notre temps, featuring interviews with ...
View Movie
In a series of four documentaries, Marcel Ophuls pays tribute to his father Max, and in this last on...
View Movie
An interview with French documentarian Marcel Ophüls about his father Max Ophüls, regarding Max's ar...
View Movie
Twenty-six people - including two daughters, an ex-wife, his last lover, actors, fellow directors an...
View Movie
Marcel Ophüls interviews various important Eastern European figures for their thoughts on the reunif...
View Movie
In 1912, in Austria, the painter Egon Schiele is sent to jail accused of pornography with the nymphe...
View Movie
We follow Marcel Ophuls' two journeys to Sarajevo in 1993. He is starting a documentary about war co...
View Movie
The story of the documentary The Sorrow and the Pity (1971), directed by Marcel Ophüls, which caused...
View Movie