Advertisement

L.A. film critics to honor Frederick Wiseman

Share via

The Los Angeles Film Critics Assn. has named renowned documentary filmmaker Frederick Wiseman the recipient of the group’s career achievement award.

The 82-year-old Emmy-winning documentarian will receive the award at a ceremony Jan. 12 at the Intercontinental Hotel. Wiseman is the first documentary filmmaker to ever receive this honor, according to the critics group.

After being trained as an attorney, Wiseman turned to documentary filmmaking, first as a producer on 1964’s “The Cool World,” then as a director on the award-winning 1967 film “Titicut Follies,” about the patient inmates at the Bridgewater State Hospital for the criminally insane in Massachusetts.

He is one of the pioneers of the observational, or cinema verite, style of documentary filmmaking. He favors long takes with no interviews or voice-overs. Some of his films are four to five hours long.

Over the decades, Wiseman has made countless documentaries examining such social institutions in the U.S. as hospitals, schools, the police and public housing. Among his other well-known films are 1968’s “High School,” 1970’s “Hospital,” 1985’s “Racetrack,” 1991’s “Central Park” and 2010’s “Boxing Gym.”

The three-time Emmy winner’s last film was 2011’s “Crazy Horse,” which looked at a Paris nightclub that boasts it has the most chic nude revue in the world. Earlier, Wiseman won Emmys for his films “Hospital” and “Law and Order.”

LAFCA also announced on Saturday that its members will vote on their year-end film awards for the best of 2012 on Dec. 9.

RELATED:

A new heyday

L.A. film critics honor Paul Mazursky

Jean-Paul Belmondo in L.A. to accept award

Advertisement