PETER WEIR
(1944- ) Born August 21, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Key Production Countries: USA, Australia
Key Genres: Drama, Psychological Drama, Comedy, Romance, Disaster Film, Romantic Drama, Mystery, Coming-of-Age, Adventure Drama, Adventure
Key Collaborators: William Anderson (Editor), Russell Boyd (Cinematographer), Maurice Jarre (Composer), Jim McElroy (Producer), John Seale (Cinematographer), Harrison Ford (Leading Actor), Mel Gibson (Leading Actor), Hal McElroy (Producer), Edward S. Feldman (Producer), Max Lemon (Editor), Thom Noble (Editor), Vivean Gray (Leading Character Actress)
"A natural film-maker, Peter Weir displays an uncanny command of mood, pace, and nuance, creating a symphony of moving images... Weir's cinema arguably lacks the profundity (and certainly the solemnity) of Andrei Tarkovsky's, but their films share an aura of spirituality." - Ronald Bergan (Film - Eyewitness Companions, 2006)
"Peter Weir helped spearhead the Australian New Wave with a handful of shorts and his feature debut, the sideways thriller The Cars That Ate Paris (1974). But it was the haunting and enigmatic Picnic at Hanging Rock (1975) that introduced Weir to wider audiences... Average people cast into odd or often unusual circumstances is a theme Weir would gravitate toward again and again in future projects, with his protagonists often outsiders trying to make sense of strange new worlds." - Joshua Klein (501 Movie Directors: A Comprehensive Guide to the Greatest Filmmakers, 2007)
"The best-known director to emerge from the New Australian Cinema of the '70s, Peter Weir has repeatedly proved himself an efficient, ambitious talent. But his pretensions would appear greater than his achievements: attempting to explore the irrational mysteries that underlie civilisation, and the gulf between primitive and modern cultures, he rarely rises above woolly generalisations... Weir seems too wary of approaching his films intellectually to cope properly with the complex themes which attract him. If he is never less than a slick, proficient entertainer, the lack of depth in his work suggests that he may never be a great director." - Geoff Andrew (The Film Handbook, 1989)
"For the viewer, one of the great pleasures of Weir's films is to take up his textual invitation and read them actively, and indeed, even selectively. For both the viewers and the central characters of Weir's films alike, there is always a requirement to try and move beyond narrow understandings and definitions of cultures and identities". - Ros Jennings (Fifty Contemporary Filmmakers, 2002)
"Having found early success in his home country, he moved to Hollywood, where his characteristic themes of physical and cultural isolation, and the mysteries of the natural world, were used to good effect in numerous mainstream productions." - Chambers Film Factfinder, 2006
"One of the best of Australia's 1970s 'New Wave' directors and something of a poet of emotional and physical claustrophobia. Weir is adept at maintaining the basic integrity of his films while still securing success at the box office." - Mario Reading (The Movie Companion, 2006)
"Peter Weir is the most important of that group of young film-makers who put the Australian cinema on the international movie map for the first time in the mid-70s." - Joel W. Finler (The Movie Directors Story, 1985)
(1944- ) Born August 21, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Key Production Countries: USA, Australia
Key Genres: Drama, Psychological Drama, Comedy, Romance, Disaster Film, Romantic Drama, Mystery, Coming-of-Age, Adventure Drama, Adventure
Key Collaborators: William Anderson (Editor), Russell Boyd (Cinematographer), Maurice Jarre (Composer), Jim McElroy (Producer), John Seale (Cinematographer), Harrison Ford (Leading Actor), Mel Gibson (Leading Actor), Hal McElroy (Producer), Edward S. Feldman (Producer), Max Lemon (Editor), Thom Noble (Editor), Vivean Gray (Leading Character Actress)
"A natural film-maker, Peter Weir displays an uncanny command of mood, pace, and nuance, creating a symphony of moving images... Weir's cinema arguably lacks the profundity (and certainly the solemnity) of Andrei Tarkovsky's, but their films share an aura of spirituality." - Ronald Bergan (Film - Eyewitness Companions, 2006)
"Peter Weir helped spearhead the Australian New Wave with a handful of shorts and his feature debut, the sideways thriller The Cars That Ate Paris (1974). But it was the haunting and enigmatic Picnic at Hanging Rock (1975) that introduced Weir to wider audiences... Average people cast into odd or often unusual circumstances is a theme Weir would gravitate toward again and again in future projects, with his protagonists often outsiders trying to make sense of strange new worlds." - Joshua Klein (501 Movie Directors: A Comprehensive Guide to the Greatest Filmmakers, 2007)
"The best-known director to emerge from the New Australian Cinema of the '70s, Peter Weir has repeatedly proved himself an efficient, ambitious talent. But his pretensions would appear greater than his achievements: attempting to explore the irrational mysteries that underlie civilisation, and the gulf between primitive and modern cultures, he rarely rises above woolly generalisations... Weir seems too wary of approaching his films intellectually to cope properly with the complex themes which attract him. If he is never less than a slick, proficient entertainer, the lack of depth in his work suggests that he may never be a great director." - Geoff Andrew (The Film Handbook, 1989)
"For the viewer, one of the great pleasures of Weir's films is to take up his textual invitation and read them actively, and indeed, even selectively. For both the viewers and the central characters of Weir's films alike, there is always a requirement to try and move beyond narrow understandings and definitions of cultures and identities". - Ros Jennings (Fifty Contemporary Filmmakers, 2002)
"Having found early success in his home country, he moved to Hollywood, where his characteristic themes of physical and cultural isolation, and the mysteries of the natural world, were used to good effect in numerous mainstream productions." - Chambers Film Factfinder, 2006
"One of the best of Australia's 1970s 'New Wave' directors and something of a poet of emotional and physical claustrophobia. Weir is adept at maintaining the basic integrity of his films while still securing success at the box office." - Mario Reading (The Movie Companion, 2006)
"Peter Weir is the most important of that group of young film-makers who put the Australian cinema on the international movie map for the first time in the mid-70s." - Joel W. Finler (The Movie Directors Story, 1985)
Recommended
Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World (2003)
Worth a Look
Witness (1985), The Mosquito Coast (1986)
IMDb profile
Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World (2003)
Worth a Look
Witness (1985), The Mosquito Coast (1986)
IMDb profile