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Aki Kaurismäki

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Aki Kaurismäki (born April 4, 1957) is a Finnish script writer and film director.

Aki Kaurismäki started his career as a co-director in the films of his elder brother Mika Kaurismäki. His debut as independent director was Crime and Punishment (1983), Dostoevsky's famous crime story set into modern-day Helsinki.

He gained worldwide fame by producing the movie Leningrad Cowboys Go America.

His style has been influenced a lot by such directors as Jean-Pierre Melville, Rainer Werner Fassbinder and Robert Bresson, as he relies on low-key acting and simple cinematic storytelling to get his message(s) across. His movies have a unique downplayed humorous side that can also be traced to Jim Jarmusch, who has a cameo in Aki's film The Leningrad Cowboys Go America. Jarmusch also used frequent Kaurismäki actors in his film Night on Earth, a part of which takes place in Helsinki, the capital of Finland.

Much of his work is centred on his native city of Helsinki, particularly Calamari Union which is largely set in the working class neighbourhood of Kallio, and the trilogy which is comprised of Shadows in Paradise, Ariel, and The Match Factory Girl. His vision of Helsinki is, it should be noted, both critical and singularly unromantic.

Kaurismäki's most successful movie, for the time being, has been The Man Without a Past. It won the Grand Prix at the Cannes Film Festival in 2002 and was nominated for an Academy Award in the Best Foreign Language Film category in 2003.

Filmography

Short films

Documentaries

Fiction films

External links

Kaurismäki facts

 


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