Andrew Haigh

English filmmaker From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Andrew Haigh (/hɡ/;[1] born 7 March 1973) is an English filmmaker. He is best known for writing and directing the films Weekend (2011), 45 Years (2015), Lean on Pete (2017), and All of Us Strangers (2023). He also wrote and directed the HBO series Looking (2014–2015) and its film sequel Looking: The Movie (2016), as well as the BBC Two limited series The North Water (2021).

Born (1973-03-07) 7 March 1973 (age 53)
Harrogate, England
OccupationFilmmaker
Yearsactive1996–present
SpouseAndy Morwood
Quick facts Born, Occupation ...
Andrew Haigh
Haigh in June 2011
Born (1973-03-07) 7 March 1973 (age 53)
Harrogate, England
OccupationFilmmaker
Years active1996–present
SpouseAndy Morwood
Children2
Websiteandrewhaighfilm.com
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Early life

Haigh was born in Harrogate on 7 March 1973[2][3] and grew up in Croydon.[4] He studied history at Newcastle University.[5]

Career

Haigh worked as an assistant editor on films such as Gladiator and Black Hawk Down before debuting as a writer/director with the short film Oil. In 2009 he directed his first feature-length film, Greek Pete, which debuted at the London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival.[6] The film is set in London and centers on male prostitution, chronicling a year in the life of rent-boy Pete. Greek Pete won the Artistic Achievement Award at Outfest in 2009.[7]

Haigh's second feature, the romantic drama Weekend about a 48-hour relationship between two men (played by Tom Cullen and Chris New), premiered on 11 March 2011 at the SXSW Film Festival, where it won the Audience Award for Emerging Visions.[8][9] The film played in many other festivals around the world, and went on to collect many more awards including the Grand Jury Award for Outstanding International Narrative Feature at L.A. Outfest[10] and London Film Critics' Circle award for Breakthrough British Filmmaker.[11][12]

Haigh's next film 45 Years (2015) premiered as part of the main competition at the 65th Berlin International Film Festival.[13] It won the top acting prizes at the festival for both its leads, Charlotte Rampling and Tom Courtenay. The film screened at the Telluride and Toronto film festivals in September 2015. The film later received an Academy Award nomination for Charlotte Rampling. Upon release, it received positive reviews, holding a 97% rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Kate Taylor of The Globe and Mail wrote: "45 Years exposes the paradoxical balance of the successful marriage, one that requires a sentimental suspension of disbelief on the one hand and a hard-headed ability to deal with the everyday on the other."[14]

Haigh co-created, co-produced and occasionally wrote and directed the HBO drama series Looking (2014–2016), about a group of gay men in San Francisco, which struggled to attract audiences despite receiving generally positive reviews from critics.[15][16] Cancelled after two seasons, the series finished with a two-hour TV movie in 2016.[17][18] Haigh's next film, Lean on Pete, based on the Willy Vlautin novel about a teenage boy in Oregon, premiered at the 74th Venice International Film Festival in 2017. It was released in cinemas and on VOD in April–May 2018 and received critical acclaim.[19][20] In October 2016, Haigh was announced as the writer-director of The North Water, a mini-series based on the novel of the same name by Ian McGuire. Filming began in summer 2018.[21][22] After some filming delays in March 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, it was released between 15 July and 12 August on BBC Two in 2021.[23]

In 2023, Haigh returned to film directing the romance drama All of Us Strangers starring Andrew Scott and Paul Mescal. The film is an adaptation of the Taichi Yamada novel Strangers (1988). The film premiered at the 50th Telluride Film Festival to critical acclaim and was distributed by Searchlight Pictures. The film also screened across the UK as a part of the BFI London Film Festival and is set to appear at the New York Film Festival on 16 October 2023. Peter Debruge of Variety praised the film writing, "Haigh brings a sense of intimacy to this movie, presenting us with characters who are willing to be vulnerable to partners they barely know. It’s sexy, of course, but also quite moving, as this kind of exposed honesty feels like the foundation for any relationship".[24]

In 2024, Haigh directed a music video for the Pet Shop Boys song "A New Bohemia". Filmed in Margate, the video features Tracey Emin and Russell Tovey.[25]

Influences

Haigh participated in the 2022 Sight and Sound poll, which is held once every 10 years for contemporary filmmakers to select their 10 favourite films in no particular order; he chose Black Narcissus (1947), Some Like It Hot (1959), L'avventura (1960), The Manchurian Candidate (1962), Cries and Whispers (1972), Don't Look Now (1973), Watership Down (1978), Ratcatcher (1999), Uzak (2002), and The Holy Girl (2004).[26]

Personal life

Haigh is gay.[27] He is married to Andy Morwood,[18] with whom he has two daughters.[28][4][29]

Filmography

Film

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Director Writer Editor
2009 Greek Pete Yes Yes Yes
2011 Weekend Yes Yes Yes
2015 45 Years Yes Yes No
2017 Lean on Pete Yes Yes No
2023 All of Us Strangers Yes Yes No
TBA A Long Winter Yes Yes No
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Short film

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Director Writer Editor
2003 Oil Yes Yes Yes
2005 Markings Yes Yes No
2005 Cahuenga Blvd Yes Yes Yes
2009 Five Miles Out Yes Yes No
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Editor / Miscellaneous

Television

More information Year, Title ...
Year Title Director Writer Notes
2014–2015 Looking Yes Yes Also executive producer
2016 Looking: The Movie Yes Yes TV movie
2019 The OA Yes No 2 episodes
2021 The North Water Yes Yes Miniseries[21]
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Critical reception

More information Film, Rotten Tomatoes Critic Score ...
Critical and public response of Marvel Cinematic Universe films
Film
Rotten Tomatoes Critic Score Rotten Tomatoes Average Critic Rating Metacritic
Greek Pete 58% (12 reviews)[30] 5.2/10[31] -
Weekend 95% (87 reviews)[32] 8.1/10[33] 81 (18 reviews)[34]
45 Years 97% (211 reviews)[35] 8.6/10[36] 94 (36 reviews)[37]
Lean on Pete 90% (190 reviews)[38] 7.9/10[39] 80 (40 reviews)[40]
All of Us Strangers 96% (252 reviews)[41] 8.8/10[42] 90 (53 reviews)[43]
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Awards and nominations

More information Year, Association ...
Year Association Category Project Result Ref.
2009 Leeds International Film Festival Yorkshire Film Award Five Miles Out Won
2009 Atlanta Film Festival Special Jury Award Greek Pete Won
L.A. Outfest Programming Award for Artistic Achievement Won
2011 Evening Standard British Film Awards Best Screenplay Weekend Won
International Film Festival RotterdamMovieZone AwardWon
L.A. OutfestGrand Jury AwardWon
London Film Critics' Circle AwardBreakthrough British FilmmakerWon
Nashville Film FestivalBest of Festival AwardWon
San Francisco International LGBT Film FestivalAudience AwardWon
SXSW Film FestivalAudience AwardWon
2015Edinburgh International Film FestivalMichael Powell Award for Best British Feature Film45 YearsWon
Evening Standard British Film AwardEditor's AwardWon
London Film Critics' Circle Award Best British / Irish Film of the YearWon
National Board of ReviewTop Ten Independent FilmsWon
BAFTA AwardOutstanding British FilmNominated
Berlin International Film FestivalGolden BearNominated
British Independent Film AwardBest British Independent FilmNominated
Best DirectorNominated
Best ScreenplayNominated
David di Donatello AwardBest European FilmNominated
Empire AwardBest British FilmNominated
European Film AwardBest ScreenwriterNominated
Evening Standard British Film AwardBest FilmNominated
London Film Critics' Circle AwardBest Film of the YearNominated
Director of the YearNominated
San Francisco Film Critics CircleBest Adapted ScreenplayNominated
2018British Independent Film AwardBest DirectorLean on PeteNominated
2023British Independent Film AwardBest British Independent FilmAll of Us StrangersWon
Best DirectorWon
Best ScreenplayWon
2024Critics' Choice Movie AwardBest Adapted ScreenplayNominated
Satellite AwardBest Adapted ScreenplayNominated
BAFTA AwardBest DirectorNominated[44]
Best Adapted ScreenplayNominated
Outstanding British FilmNominated
Independent Spirit AwardBest DirectorNominated
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References

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