Benoît_Poelvoorde

Benoît Poelvoorde

Benoît Poelvoorde

Belgian actor and comedian


Benoît Poelvoorde (French pronunciation: [bənwa pulvɔʁd], Dutch: [pulˈvoːrdə]; born 22 September 1964) is a Belgian actor[1] and comedian.

Quick Facts Born, Occupation(s) ...

Early life

His mother was a grocer and his father a driver, who died when Poelvoorde was still a minor. He attended the Jesuit Boarding School of Godinne before he left home at 17 to take classes at the Félicien Rops Technical Institute in Namur (Belgium) where he met Rémy Belvaux. He developed a passion for theater and became noted for his atypical interpretations. Not only was he destined to become a draughtsman, he also developed professionality as a photographer. During his graphic design studies at the École de recherche graphique in Brussels, he also became friends with André Bonzel and, together with Rémy Belvaux, directed in 1988 Pas de C4 pour Daniel Daniel, his first movie, a student short film (which he co-directed and co-wrote). It was a stylized trailer for a mock-spy film.

Career

Benoît Poelvoorde in 2007

In 1992, Poelvoorde, Belvaux and Bonzel wrote, produced and directed together their first long feature C'est arrivé près de chez vous (Man Bites Dog internationally) originally a low-budget school graduation project (1992) and a kind of cynical "noir" movie, inspired from the famous Belgian series "Strip-Tease" which went on to become a critically acclaimed cult movie. The film received the André Cavens Award for Best Film by the Belgian Film Critics Association (UCC).

Poelvoorde subsequently starred in two series on the French pay-channel Canal+ and several movies such as Les Randonneurs, Le Boulet and Podium, which made him famous in France and Belgium. In 2001, he starred in Le Vélo de Ghislain Lambert, a movie about one of his passions, bicycling. In 2002, he received the Jean Gabin Prize, which recognized the most hopeful young talents. Poelvoorde became a member of the Cannes Film Festival Jury in 2004 by request of Quentin Tarantino, a big fan of Man Bites Dog who had presided over the Jury that year.

In 2005 he ranked in 7th place in the Walloon version of the Greatest Belgian. In the Flemish version he came in at nr. 400 outside the official list of nominations.

In 2008, his performance in the movie Astérix aux Jeux olympiques won him critical acclaim by both film critics and the public at large. His recurrent character as a pretentious person and a sore loser has drawn comparisons between him and the beloved French comedian Louis de Funès. Poelvoorde also played serious roles. He has starred in 2009 as Etienne Balsan in Coco avant Chanel by Anne Fontain, with Audrey Tautou; as Jean-René in 2010 with Isabelle Carré in a comedy by Jean-Pierre Améris Émotifs anonymes about two extremely shy persons who fall in love, and also as August Maquet in L'autre Dumas by Safy Nebbou, alongside Gérard Depardieu and Dominique Blanc, a movie about the creative ghostwriter, Maquet, who played a crucial role in the production of French writer Alexandre Dumas' Three Musketeers. For his work in A Place on Earth (2013), Poelvoorde received a Magritte Award for Best Actor.

Personal life

The actor revealed in interviews,[2] that he suffered from bipolar disorder.

In 2019, during the shooting of the movie Raoul Taburin a un secret, based on the book by Jean-Jacques Sempé, Poelvoorde had a bicycle accident and received 17 stitches.[3]

Selected filmography

More information Year, Title ...

Voice acting

Short films


References

  1. Willis, John (1 April 1995). Screen World 1994. Hal Leonard Corporation. pp. 231–. ISBN 9781557832016. Retrieved 1 June 2012.
  2. [in the Belgian newspaper Le Soir (6 February 2010 "Oui, je suis bipolaire")]
  3. Fontaine, Mathilde (12 April 2019). "VIDEO Benoît Poelvoorde gravement blessé sur le tournage de son dernier film". Voici (in French). Retrieved 29 December 2023.
  4. Mathijs, Ernest (2005). "Man Bites Dog and the Critical Reception of Belgian Horror (in) Cinema". In Schneider, Steven Jay; Williams, Tony (eds.). Horror International (Contemporary Approaches to Film and Television). Wayne State University Press. pp. 315–335. ISBN 9780814331019.
  5. Powrie, Phil (2017). Music in Contemporary French Cinema: The Crystal-Song. Springer International Publishing. p. 211. ISBN 9783319523620.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Benoît_Poelvoorde, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.