Wolfgang Petersen

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Wolfgang Petersen

Wolfgang Petersen at the filming of Air Force One
Born March 14, 1941 (1941-03-14) (age 67)
Emden, Lower Saxony, Germany
Occupation Film director
Years active 1965–present
Spouse(s) Ursula Sieg (div.1978)
Maria Borgel-Petersen (1978-)

Wolfgang Petersen (born March 14, 1941 in Emden, Lower Saxony, Germany) is a German film director. Petersen is known for his body of film work, which includes Outbreak, In the Line of Fire, Air Force One, The Perfect Storm, and the 2004 film, Troy. He was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Director for the 1981 World War II submarine warfare film Das Boot.

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[edit] Biography

Wolfgang Petersen was born during World War II on 14 March 1941 in the small north German community of Emden near the Dutch border, where the Ems River flows into the North Sea. From 1953 to 1960 Petersen attended the Johanneum school in Hamburg. In the 1960s he was directing plays at Hamburg's Ernst Deutsch Theater. After studying theater in Berlin and Hamburg, Petersen attended the Film and Television Academy in Berlin (1966–1970). His first film productions were for German television, and it was during his work on the popular German Tatort ("Crime Scene") TV series that he first met and worked with the actor Jürgen Prochnow — who would later appear as the U-boat captain in Das Boot.

[edit] Film work

One of his first efforts was the 1977 Die Konsequenz, a b/w 16 mm adaptation of Alexander Ziegler's autobiographical novel of pederastic love, a movie considered "one of the best `70s gay dramas."[1] In its time, the film was considered so radical that when first broadcast in Germany, the Bavarian network turned off the transmitters rather than broadcast it.

Petersen's first actual full-blown Hollywood effort (also filmed at the Bavaria Film Studios complex in Germany), Enemy Mine (1985), was neither a critical nor a box office success. He finally hit his stride in 1993 with the assassination thriller In the Line of Fire. Starring Clint Eastwood as an angst-ridden presidential Secret Service guard, In the Line of Fire gave Petersen the box office clout he needed to direct another suspense thriller, Outbreak (1995), starring Dustin Hoffman. The 1997 Petersen blockbuster, Air Force One, did very well at the box office, while getting a mix of opinions from movie critics. In another recent project, Petersen was the executive-producer for the film Red Corner, starring Richard Gere.

By 1998, Petersen was an established Hollywood director, with the power to both re-release his classic Das Boot in a new director's cut and to helm star-studded action-thrillers such as In the Line of Fire and Air Force One for Sony Pictures' Columbia/TriStar. For both Air Force One and Outbreak (but not for The Perfect Storm) Petersen teamed up with the German cinematographer Michael Ballhaus, who has also worked frequently with director Martin Scorsese.

In May 2006, Petersen's $160 million epic film Poseidon, a re-telling of the 1969 Paul Gallico novel (and popular 1972 disaster film) The Poseidon Adventure, was released by Warner Bros., but performed poorly in the US, barely cracking $60 million in box office receipts by early August, although international profits surpassed $121 million, for a total $181 million, Poseidon is considered a summer blockbuster.[citation needed]

He directed the film adaptation of Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card, scheduled for release in 2008.

[edit] Selected filmography

[edit] References

[edit] External links


Persondata
NAME Petersen, Wolfgang
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION German film director
DATE OF BIRTH March 14, 1941
PLACE OF BIRTH Emden, Lower Saxony, Germany
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH