Noah Baumbach
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Noah Baumbach | |
Noah Baumbach |
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| Born | September 3, 1969 (age 37) |
| Spouse(s) | Jennifer Jason Leigh (2005-) |
| Academy Awards | |
|---|---|
| Nominated: Best Original Screenplay 2005 The Squid and the Whale |
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Noah Baumbach (born September 3, 1969, in Brooklyn, New York) is an American independent film writer and director. He attended Midwood High School (1987) and Vassar College. He is the son of novelist/film critic Jonathan Baumbach and Village Voice critic Georgia Brown. He made his writing and directing debut at the age of 24 with Kicking and Screaming (1995), a comedy about four young men who graduate from college and refuse to move on with their lives, each in his own peculiar way. The film, which starred Josh Hamilton, Chris Eigeman, Carlos Jacott, and featured Eric Stoltz, Olivia d'Abo and Parker Posey, premiered in 1995 at the prestigious New York Film Festival to critical acclaim. Baumbach was chosen as one of Newsweek's "Ten New Faces of 1996". The film appeared in several "Top Ten" lists. It later became traditional at Vassar that graduating seniors should watch Kicking and Screaming.
Next he wrote and directed Mr. Jealousy (1997), about a young writer so jealous over his girlfriend that he sneaks into the group therapy sessions of her ex-boyfriend to discover what kind of relationship they had. He then co-wrote (under the name Jesse Carter) and directed (under the name Ernie Fusco) the New York-set comedy of manners Highball (1997). Although many of Baumbach's fans liked Highball, he disowns it. This trio of dark, talky, witty comedies about young people have been compared to Whit Stillman's mid-90s trio of dark talky movies about the frivolous lives of wealthy and witty young people, Metropolitan, Barcelona, and The Last Days of Disco
Baumbach is a contributor to The New Yorker magazine's Shouts & Murmurs department, and is one of the commentators on the Criterion Collection version of Preston Sturges' Sullivan's Travels. He co-wrote The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (2004) with Wes Anderson.
His most recent film, The Squid and the Whale (2005), is an autobiographical comedy-drama about his childhood in Brooklyn and the effect of his parents' divorce on the family in the mid 1980s. The film stars Jeff Daniels and Laura Linney in the parent roles. The Squid and the Whale became something of an unexpected sleeper hit and a critical success, earning Baumbach two awards at the 2005 Sundance Film Festival as well as an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay. It also received six Independent Spirit Award nominations, three Golden Globe nominations, while the New York Film Critics Circle, Los Angeles Film Critics Association and the National Board of Review all voted it the year’s best screenplay.
Baumbach and his girlfriend of four years, the critically acclaimed Hollywood actress Jennifer Jason Leigh, got married on September 3, 2005. It was Leigh who suggested casting the child actor Owen Kline in a pivotal role in The Squid and the Whale, as Owen is the son of her best friend Phoebe Cates and husband Kevin Kline.
Baumbach's next film is a comedy drama titled Margot at the Wedding, starring Jennifer Jason Leigh with Nicole Kidman, Jack Black and John Turturro. In the film, Kidman plays a woman named Margot who spends a weekend visiting her sister Pauline (Leigh) on the eve of her wedding to Black's character. It was shot in April/May 2006 in Hampton Bays, and City Island, Bronx and is currently scheduled for US release via Paramount Classics on October 12, 2007.
- Noah Baumbach at the Internet Movie Database
- "To Wed and To Fail" - Review of Baumbach's The Squid and the Whale, in n+1 magazine, by Christian Lorentzen.
- "Young Intellectuals Making Movies", essay on Noah Baumbach and Andrew Bujalski in Dissent (magazine), Summer 2006.
- "Reasons for Kicking and Screaming - Critical Essay of Kicking and Screaming by Jonathan Rosenbaum.