WORLD
French film-maker Claude Miller dies: production company
Baku, April 5 (AZERTAC). French film director, producer and screenwriter Claude Miller, whose works include "The Best Way to Walk" and "Class Trip", has died aged 70, his production company said Thursday. Miller died Wednesday in Paris after a long illness, said Les Films du 24, one of his production companies.
Among other renowed works by the film-maker are "La Petite Voleuse" (The Litte Thief) which starred Charlotte Gainsbourg; "Garde a Vue" (Custody) in 1981; and "Mortelle Randonnee" (Mortal Circuit) in 1983.
Born in Paris on February 20, 1942, Miller attended the prestigious Idhec cinema school in the French capital. He learned his craft with some of the giants of French cinema, as an assistant to Marcel Carne, then working with two leading figures in the New Wave, Jean Luc Godard and Francois Truffaut. He worked his way up through all the key positions in the production side before taking the director's chair in 1976 with "La meilleure facon de marcher" ("The Best Way to Walk"), his full-length feature. Charting the conflict betweeen a macho counsellor at a children's summer camp (Patrick Dewaere) and his more timid, middle class colleague, it got five nominations and one win at the French equivalent of the Oscars, the Cesars. And after critical success, a commercial hit was not long in coming. "Garde a vue" (1981) set out another psychological duel, this time with Lino Ventura as a tough police inspector interrogating suspected child sex killer Michel Serrault. As well as box office success, it won four Cesars including one for Serrault and another for Miller for best adapted screenplay from John Wainwright's book. It was adapted in Hollywood as "Under Suspicion" (2000) starring Morgan Freeman and Gene Hackman.
During his career Miller worked with many of the top actors of his day, helping some of them launch their careers. He casting a young Charlotte Gainsbourg in two films, "L'Effrontee" (1985) and "La Petite Voleuse" (1988). His work also included adaptations of literary classics such as Chekhov's "The Seagull". He had recently completed his final film, "Therese Desqueyroux" adapted from a story by Francois Mauriac. Currently in post-production, it is due to be released this autumn.