Miloš Forman Direktur kelahiran Ceko
Miloš Forman Direktur kelahiran Ceko
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Milose Forman, (lahir 18 Februari 1932, Čáslav, Cekoslowakia [sekarang di Republik Ceko] — meninggal 13 April 2018, Danbury, Connecticut, AS), pembuat film New Wave kelahiran Ceko yang dikenal terutama karena film khas Amerika yang dia membuat setelah imigrasi ke Amerika Serikat.

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Siap, Tetapkan, Aksi!

Siapa yang memerankan Merry Brandybuck dalam film Lord of the Rings?

Forman tumbuh di sebuah kota kecil dekat Praha. Setelah orang tuanya, aktivis guru Rudolf Forman dan seorang ibu rumah tangga Protestan, meninggal di kamp konsentrasi Nazi, ia dibesarkan oleh dua paman dan teman keluarga; pada 1960-an ia mengetahui bahwa ayah kandungnya bukanlah Rudolf Forman, tetapi seorang arsitek Yahudi. Pada pertengahan 1950-an, Forman belajar di Fakultas Film Akademi Seni di Praha. Setelah lulus, ia menulis dua skenario, yang pertama, Nechte to na mně (1955; Leave It to Me), difilmkan oleh sutradara terkenal Martin Frič. Forman adalah asisten sutradara pada skenario kedua itu, sebuah roman berjudul Štěňata (1958; Cubs).

Sepanjang akhir 1950-an dan awal 60-an Forman bertindak sebagai penulis atau asisten sutradara di film-film lain. Produksi besar pertama yang disutradarai, Peterný Petr (1964; Black Peter) dan Lásky jedné plavovlásky (1965; Loves of a Blonde), meraih sukses besar baik di dalam negeri maupun internasional — yang terakhir menerima nominasi Academy Award untuk film berbahasa asing terbaik. —Dan Forman dipuji sebagai bakat utama Gelombang Baru Ceko. Film-film awalnya ditandai dengan pemeriksaan kehidupan kelas pekerja dan antusiasme mereka terhadap gaya hidup sosialis. Elemen-elemen itu juga terbukti dalam Hoří, ma panenko (1967; The Firemen's Ball), yang mengeksplorasi masalah sosial dan moral dengan sindiran lembut. Ketika Bola Pemadam Kebakaran dilarang di Cekoslowakia setelah invasi Soviet tahun 1968, Forman berimigrasi ke Amerika Serikat; dia menjadi ASwarga negara pada tahun 1975.

Forman’s first American film was Taking Off (1971), a story about runaway teenagers and their parents. Although not a box-office success, it won the jury grand prize at the Cannes film festival. The movie was also notable for being the last of Forman’s works to incorporate his early themes. Most of his American films are also bereft of the earlier social concerns that defined his Czech films, although he clearly demonstrated his mastery of the craft of direction and showed a remarkable ability to work with actors.

One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975) was an independent production that had been turned down by every major studio, but it catapulted Forman to the forefront of Hollywood directors. A potent adaptation of Ken Kesey’s 1962 novel, it starred Jack Nicholson as Randle P. McMurphy, an irrepressible free spirit who cons his way from a prison work farm into a mental hospital. Against his better judgment, he enters into a war of wills with the sadistic head nurse (played by Louise Fletcher). The film became the first since It Happened One Night (1934) to win all five major Academy Awards: best picture, actor (Nicholson), actress (Fletcher), director, and screenplay (Bo Goldman and Lawrence Hauben).

Hair (1979) was Forman’s much-anticipated version of the Broadway musical, but it was a disappointment at the box office, despite receiving generally positive reviews. The director then made Ragtime (1981), a handsomely mounted, expensive adaptation of E.L. Doctorow’s best-selling novel about early 20th-century America. The historical drama starred James Cagney in his first credited big-screen appearance in some 20 years; it was the actor’s last feature film. Ragtime, however, also failed to find an audience, although it received eight Oscar nominations.

Forman rebounded from those mild disappointments with the acclaimed Amadeus (1984), Peter Shaffer’s reworking of his stage success. F. Murray Abraham gave an Oscar-winning performance as the jealous Antonio Salieri, and Tom Hulce earned praise as Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. The lavish production won eight Oscars, including for best picture and Forman’s second for best director. After that triumph he took a five-year break from directing, reappearing with Valmont (1989), an adaptation of Pierre Choderlos de Laclos’s classic novel Dangerous Liaisons. However, Forman’s version—which starred Colin Firth, Annette Bening, and Meg Tilly—was generally compared unfavourably to Stephen Frears’s adaptation, which had been released the previous year.

In 1996 Forman returned to form with The People vs. Larry Flynt, a biopic of the pornographic magazine publisher whose legal battles provoked debates about freedom of speech. The dramedy featured strong performances, notably by Woody Harrelson in an Oscar-nominated turn as the controversial Flynt, Courtney Love as Flynt’s wife, and Edward Norton as his frustrated attorney. Forman earned an Academy Award nomination for his directing. He also garnered praise for Man on the Moon (1999), in which Jim Carrey channeled the genius of the late comic Andy Kaufman. The fine supporting cast included Danny DeVito, Love, and Paul Giamatti. Less successful was Goya’s Ghosts (2006), a costume drama starring Natalie Portman as a model for the artist Francisco de Goya (Stellan Skarsgård) and Javier Bardem as a church official who rapes her after she is unjustly imprisoned during the Spanish Inquisition. In 2009 Forman codirected the musical Dobre placená procházka (A Walk Worthwhile).

In addition to his directorial efforts, Forman occasionally acted in films, including Heartburn (1986), Keeping the Faith (2000), and Les Bien-Aimés (2011; Beloved). He also cowrote (with Jan Novák) the memoir Turnaround (1994).