• Name: Gregg Araki
  • Date of Birth: December 17, 1959
  • Place of Birth: Los Angeles, California, USA
Mini-bio: One of the angriest, most unconventional, and relentlessly intriguing voices in independent cinema, filmmaker Gregg Araki emerged on the film scene with the subtlety of a gunshot to the head with The ... read moreLiving End in 1992. His story of two HIV-positive gay lovers on a highway rampage quickly established him as one of the key figures in the "New Queer Cinema." The film reached out to many of society's more alienated members--gay and straight--who related to its energetic rage and identified with the anger of its principle characters.Of Asian-American heritage, Araki is a native of Southern California. After attending film school at the University of Southern California--where he was particularly influenced by screwball comedies such as Bringing Up Baby-- he made his directorial debut in 1987 with Three Bewildered People in the Night. With a budget of only $5,000 and using a stationary camera, he told the story of a romance between a video artist, her lover and her homosexual friend. Two years later, Araki made a name for himself on the festival circuit with Long Weekend (o' Despair). Produced, directed, written, photographed and edited by Araki (for his own whimsically named Desperate Pictures Company), this very small-scale Big Chill derivation involved a group of recent college graduates brooding over their futures during one woozy, boozy evening. Araki followed this modest effort with the aforementioned The Living End (1992), which was shown in competition at Sundance.Araki's next film, Totally F***ed Up (1993), was one close to his heart. Filled with rage and decidedly anti-gay cinema sentiments, it chronicled the messed-up lives of six gay adolescents who have formed a family unit and are struggling to get along with each other and with life in the face of various major obstacles. Araki himself classified it as "A rag-tag story of the fag-and-dyke teen underground....A kinda cross between avant-garde experimental cinema and a queer John Hughes flick." Whereas this film was subversive in its exploration of the youths' depression and negative attitudes toward homosexuality, Araki's fifth film, The Doom Generation, was an all-out darkly comic assault on gay and straight audiences that brimmed with graphic violence, sledgehammer symbolism and relentless eroticism. While largely trashed by more conservative critics, the piece won a measure of respect in a number of circles. Both Totally F***ed Up and The Doom Generation are part of Araki's so-called "teen apocalypse trilogy;" the final entry, Nowhere (1997), was described by its director as "A Beverly Hills 90210 episode on acid." Centering on a group of bored, alienated Los Angeles adolescents who while away a typical day with kinky sex, drugs, and the requisite wild party, the film combined a distinct brand of nihilism with a candy-colored cheerfulness. This cheerfulness was a large feature of Araki's subsequent effort, the romantic comedy Splendor. The story of a girl (Kathleen Robertson) who cannot choose between two boys (Johnathon Schaech and Matt Keeslar) and so decides to live with them both, Splendor was Araki's homage to his beloved screwball comedies. Hailed as the director's most optimistic film to date, it had its premiere at the 1999 Sundance Festival. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi
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Gregg Araki Wiki Profile


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Replace this image with an actor photoGregg Araki mini-bio: Gregg Araki is a Japanese American film director, known for several successful independent films. He is a seminal figure of the New Queer Cinema genre. Araki made his directorial debut in 1987 with Three Bewildered People in the Night. Two years later, Araki made a name for himself on the festival circuit with Long Weekend (o' Despair). Produced, directed, written, photographed and edited by Araki. He followed this up in 1992 with The Living End. Premiering at the Sundance Film Festival, the film was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize. Araki's next three films comprised his "Teenage Apocalypse Trilogy." Totally F***ed Up (1993) chronicled the dysfunctional lives of six gay adolescents who have formed a family unit and struggle to get along with each other and with life in the face of various major obstacles. The movie explored the youths' depression and homophobia. The Doom Generation, was a black comedy brimming with graphic violence, cultural symbolism and relentless eroticism. Nowhere (1997), was described by its director as "A Beverly Hills 90210 episode on acid." Araki's subsequent effort, the romantic comedy Splendor, told the story of a woman (Robertson) who cannot choose between two men and so decides to live with them both. Hailed as the director's most optimistic film to date, it made its premiere at the 1999 Sundance Film Festival.

Araki's next venture was the ill-fated MTV series This Is How the World Ends (2000). After the pilot was shot, however, it was not picked up for broadcast, there are however circulating the internet bootleg copies of the ill-fated mini series. Following a short hiatus, Araki returned with the critically acclaimed Mysterious Skin (2005). With this movie Araki found critical acclaim and a generally good public reaction. One consistent feature of Araki's work to date is the presence of music from the shoegazer genre as film soundtracks, first seen on Totally F***ed Up and heavily so on the films Nowhere and Mysterious Skin (even going so far as to employ Robin Guthrie to oversee the latter's score). Both The Living End and Nowhere are named after tracks by shoegazing bands (the Jesus and Mary Chain and Ride respectively).

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