Michael Winterbottom

Film director

Birthday March 29, 1961

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Blackburn, Lancashire, England

Age 62 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#35867 Most Popular

1860

Winterbottom's biggest-budgeted film up to that point, at $20 million, The Claim was an adaptation of Thomas Hardy's The Mayor of Casterbridge set in 1860s California.

Shot in the wilds of Canada, it was not a financial success and proved an ordeal to make, with Winterbottom himself getting frostbite.

Many of the production difficulties, including unsuccessful attempts to cast Madonna, were explained to the public on the film's unusually frank official website.

1948

Starring Rachel Weisz and Alessandro Nivola, it was inspired by the Elvis Costello song of the same name and shot by Polish cinematographer Sławomir Idziak, who won an Honourable Mention award at the 48th Berlin International Film Festival for his work.

With or Without You, starring Christopher Eccleston, is a Belfast-set comedy about a couple trying desperately to conceive, who each have past loves re-enter their lives.

Wonderland marked a shift in style for Winterbottom.

Its handheld photography and naturalistic dialogue drew comparisons to Robert Altman.

Starring Gina McKee, Shirley Henderson, Molly Parker, John Simm, Ian Hart and Stuart Townsend, it is the story of three sisters and their extended family over Guy Fawkes Day weekend in London.

It featured an orchestral score by minimalist composer Michael Nyman, who would become a frequent collaborator with Winterbottom.

1956

He and co-director Mat Whitecross won the Silver Bear for Best Director at the 56th Berlin International Film Festival for their work on The Road to Guantanamo.

His production company, Revolution Films, has a first look deal with Fremantle.

Winterbottom was born in Blackburn, Lancashire.

He went to Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School, Blackburn, and then studied English at Balliol College, Oxford, before going to film school at Bristol University, where his contemporaries included Marc Evans.

1961

Michael Winterbottom (born 29 March 1961) is an English film director.

He began his career working in British television before moving into features.

Three of his films—Welcome to Sarajevo, Wonderland and 24 Hour Party People—have competed for the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival.

1970

24 Hour Party People documents the anarchic, drug and sex-fueled rise and fall of Factory Records and the music scene in Manchester from the late 1970s to the mid-1990s.

It would be the first of many collaborations between Winterbottom and actor Steve Coogan, who starred as broadcaster/music-mogul Tony Wilson.

1989

Winterbottom's television directing career began in 1989, with a documentary about Ingmar Bergman and an episode of the children's series Dramarama.

1990

He followed this with the 1990 television film Forget About Me, starring Ewen Bremner, which followed two British soldiers who become involved in a love triangle with a young Hungarian hitch-hiker on their way to Budapest for a Simple Minds concert.

It was his first collaboration with writer Frank Cottrell-Boyce.

They would go on to make six more films together.

Shot on 16mm film, it played a few European film festivals.

1991

In 1991, he directed episodes of various British TV shows, including the four-part children's series Time Riders and an episode of Boon.

1992

In 1992, he directed the television film Under the Sun about a young British woman traveling in Greece, starring Kate Hardie.

It was shot on Super 16 film and gained him further attention.

1993

In 1993, he directed an episode of the Inspector Alleyn Mysteries; Love Lies Bleeding, a television film written by Ronan Bennett about a convicted IRA member on a 24-hour home leave from prison in Belfast; and The Mad Woman in the Attic, the pilot of Jimmy McGovern's mystery series Cracker.

1994

He next directed the 1994 mini-series Family, written by Roddy Doyle, the author of The Commitments.

It was a huge success in Ireland and led to a vocal debate there about the depiction of both the working classes and spousal abuse in the media.

1995

His final early television project was a 1995 episode of the documentary series Cinema Europe: The Other Hollywood, focusing on Scandinavian silent cinema.

Winterbottom's debut feature followed a mentally unbalanced lesbian serial killer and her submissive lover/accomplice as they fall in love while slaughtering their way across the motorways of Northern England.

It found only a limited release.

That same year, he reunited with Jimmy McGovern for the BBC television film Go Now, the story of a young man who falls ill with multiple sclerosis just as he meets the love of his life.

Focusing on the turmoil this causes the couple, the film was given a theatrical release in many countries, including the United States.

It was also the first film from Winterbottom's company Revolution Films.

Winterbottom next adapted his favourite novel, Thomas Hardy's bleak classic Jude the Obscure, a tale of forbidden love between two cousins, starring Christopher Eccleston and Kate Winslet.

The film brought Winterbottom wider recognition, his first screening at Cannes and numerous Hollywood offers.

Welcome to Sarajevo was filmed on location in the titular city, mere months after the Siege of Sarajevo had ended.

It was based on the true story of British reporter, Michael Nicholson, who spirited a young orphan girl out of the war zone to safety in Britain.

I Want You is a neo-noir sex thriller set in a decaying British seaside resort town.