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Marcel Ophüls

Biography

Marcel Ophüls

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Overview

  • Born
    November 1, 1927 · Frankfurt am Main, Hesse, Germany
  • Died
    May 24, 2025 · Lucq, Pyrénées-Atlantiques, France (Undisclosed)
  • Birth name
    Hans Marcel Oppenheimer

Biography

    • Marcel Ophuls (actually Marcel Oppenheimer) is the son of the famous German film maker Max Ophüls. He spent his formative years in Hollywood, briefly served with a U.S. Army theatrical unit in Japan in 1946 and then attended the University of California, Berkely. In 1950, already a naturalized French citizen since 1938, he moved to Paris to study philosophy at the Sorbonne. He dropped out, however, once the opportunity arose to work in the film industry as an assistant to Anatole Litvak and Julien Duvivier. After collaborating on his father's film Lola Montès (1955), Ophuls met the French actress Jeanne Moreau who agreed to put up the money for his own project, the detective comedy Peau de banane (1963), a Franco-Italian-German co-production, starring Moreau and Jean-Paul Belmondo. It was aptly described by a reviewer as "a cheerful and inventive film with some inspired dialogue". His next venture, the thriller Faites vos jeux, mesdames (1965), was rather less successful.

      Ophuls then worked for three years on Le chagrin et la pitié - chronique d'une ville française sous l'occupation (1969), a controversial documentary which criticised French collaboration with Nazi Germany during World War II. A further anti-war documentary, The Memory of Justice (1976), ran into legal problems and bankrupted Ophuls. After a four year hiatus, much of it spent on the lecture circuit, he resumed making documentaries and won an Academy Award for Hôtel Terminus (1988), the story of Gestapo chief Klaus Barbie, from innocent childhood to war criminal. Ophuls has served on the board of the French Filmmakers Society. His more recent documentaries have examined investigative journalism and the impact of Germany's reunification.
      - IMDb mini biography by: I.S.Mowis

Family

  • Spouse
      Regine Ackermann(1956 - May 24, 2025) (his death, 3 children)
  • Parents
      Hildegard Wall
      Max Ophüls
  • Relatives
      Andréas-Benjamin Seyfert(Grandchild)

Trivia

  • Biography in John Wakeman, editor. "World Film Directors, Volume Two, 1945-1985," pp. 715-719. New York: The H.W. Wilson Company, 1988.
  • Since 2013 Marcel Ophüls is a member of the 'Documentary Branch' of the 'Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences' (AMPAS).
  • Son of Max Ophüls and Hildegard Wall.
  • In 2014, Ophuls began crowd-sourcing funds for his new film Unpleasant Truths, about the continuing Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories, to be co-directed with Israeli filmmaker Eyal Sivan. In part, the film seeks to focus on possible links between the 2014 Israeli war on Gaza and the rise in anti-Semitism in Europe as well as whether "Islamophobia is the new anti-Semitism." It was originally intended as a collaboration with Jean-Luc Godard, who backed out early in the process; Godard makes an appearance as himself in the film. As of 2017, the film had not yet been completed due to unspecified financial and legal troubles, and may not be finished ever.
  • Returning from the USA to France in 1950, he started out as an assistant director, working on his father's last film "Lola Montes" in 1955.

Quotes

  • I only script in the editing room when I have maybe 120 hours of rushes [raw footage]. And I work on those, and by and by, idea by idea, sometimes they're good and sometimes they're not so good, it all comes together. [2015]
  • Ideas come when they come. My father, because he spoke German, called it 'Einfallen.' They start in heaven and then they may come down. ... Some days you have no ideas at all, for weeks or more. They don't want to come. And you've got to work for them. Some people are more creative than others. Talent is not given to everyone. [2015]

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