Raúl Ruiz(1941-2011)
- Director
- Writer
- Producer
Chilean director Raúl, or Raoul, Ruiz (1941-2011) was one of the most
exciting and innovative filmmakers to emerge from 1960s World Cinema,
providing more intellectual fun and artistic experimentation, shot for
shot, than any filmmaker since
Jean-Luc Godard. A guerrilla who
uncompromisingly assaulted the preconceptions of film art, this
frightfully prolific figure -he made over 100 films in 40 years- did
not adhere to any one style of filmmaking. He worked in 35mm, 16mm and
video, for theatrical release and for European TV, and on documentary
and fiction features and shorts. His career began in avant-garde
theatre where, between 1956 and 1962, he wrote over 100 plays. Although
he never directed any of these productions, he did dabble in TV and
filmmaking in the early 1960s. In 1968, with the release of his first
completed feature, the Cassavetes-like
Three Sad Tigers (1968),
Ruiz became one of the key Chilean directors of New Latin American
Cinema. A committed though critical supporter of the Marxist government
of Salvador Allende, Ruiz was forced to
flee his country after the fascist coup of 1973. Living in exile in
Paris from that time onwards, he found a forum for his ideas in
European TV and was championed by the critics of Cahiers du Cinéma,
several of whom appeared in his first European successes,
The Suspended Vocation (1978)
and
L'hypothèse du tableau volé (1978),
two enigmatic Pierre Klossowski
adaptations. Between 1980 and his death in 2011, Ruiz was one of the
world's most productive but least known auteurs, in part through a
long-term working relationship with Portuguese producer
Paulo Branco. Other regular collaborators
included Ruiz's wife and editor
Valeria Sarmiento, composer
Jorge Arriagada, cinematographers
Sacha Vierny,
Henri Alekan and
Ricardo Aronovich, writers
Gilbert Adair and
Pascal Bonitzer, and actor
Melvil Poupaud. Key early works from this
period included the surrealistic masterpieces
Three Crowns of the Sailor (1982),
City of Pirates (1983)
and
Manuel on the Island of Wonders (1984),
three of his many French-Portuguese co-productions perversely yet
charmingly addressing the recurring Ruizian themes of childhood, exile,
and maritime and rural folklore. In the 1990s, Ruiz embarked on larger
projects with prominent actors such as
John Hurt,
Marcello Mastroianni,
Catherine Deneuve,
Isabelle Huppert and
John Malkovich, alternating this sporadic
mainstream art-house endeavour with his usual low-budget experimental
productions and the teaching of his Poetics of Cinema (two volumes of
which he published in 1995 and 2007). In the 1990s and 2000s, he also
shot several films and TV series' in Chile, though usually without
Chilean funding. Ruiz is beloved among cinephiles as a poet of oneiric
imagery and a fabulist of labyrinthine stories-within-stories whose
films slip effortlessly from reality to imagination and back again. A
manipulator of wild intellectual games in which the rules are forever
changing, Ruiz's techniques were as varied as film itself; a collection
of bizarre angles, close-ups and deep-focus compositions, bewildering
POV shots, dazzling colours, and labyrinthine narratives which weave
and dodge the viewer's grasp with every shot. As original as Ruiz was,
one can tell much about him by the diversity of his influences; he was
clearly inspired by Jorge Luis Borges,
Robert Louis Stevenson,
Orson Welles, "Left Bank" New Wave
directors such as Chris Marker and
Alain Resnais, and baroque low-budget
Hollywood B-movie directors like
Edgar G. Ulmer,
Ford Beebe and
Reginald Le Borg. His erudition also
extended to medieval theology, Renaissance theatre and quantum physics.
Ruiz remains a much-admired auteur on the European continent, having
won prestigious prizes at Cannes, Berlin, San Sebastián, Locarno, Rome
and Rotterdam. He is little-known in his native Chile, however, despite
having made the widely seen
Little White Dove (1992), receiving
several major arts prizes and having a National Day of Mourning
dedicated to him on the day of his burial there. In the
English-speaking world, only a handful of Ruiz's films have been
distributed and it is on these few films that his reputation there is
built: most notably, major art-house fare such as the Ophüls- and
Visconti-inspired
Marcel Proust's Time Regained (1999)
but also
Comedy of Innocence (2000),
Klimt (2006) and
Mysteries of Lisbon (2011)
and straight-to-video thriller pastiches like
Shattered Image (1998) and
Blind Revenge (2009). Little of his
huge oeuvre is available on DVD. The works that are, however, bear
witness to Ruiz's unique genius.