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Noted Film Critic Peter Brunette Passes Away

Jun 17, 2010

Brunette served as Wake Forest's director of film studies program

Peter Brunette, a well-known film historian, author and critic, died unexpectedly June 16 while attending the Taormina Film Festival in Italy.

Brunette, who was 66, died of an apparent heart attack. He is survived by a sister, Rose Dean.

An expert on Italian cinema, Brunette joined the faculty at Wake Forest University in 2004 as Reynolds Professor of Film Studies and director of the film studies program, which started the same year.

Brunette was a fixture at international film festivals including Cannes, Berlin, Toronto and others. He was spending the summer in Europe attending various film festivals and attended the Taormina Film Festival for The Hollywood Reporter. He was a frequent contributor and film reviewer for The Hollywood Reporter and indieWIRE, an online news site for the international independent film community.

“He had written widely about Italian and French film,” said Professor of Music Peter Kairoff. “He was a national figure in the field as a scholar of film. He wasn’t really a reviewer of film, but rather he discussed film as an art form, addressing a film or director in the context of the history of the whole genre.”

Brunette joined the Wake Forest faculty after teaching for nearly 30 years at George Mason University, where he first taught English and later cultural studies and film studies. He also taught briefly at the Sorbonne in Paris and at the University of Maryland. At Wake Forest, he had a joint appointment in the departments of art and communication.

“He was lively, dynamic and always engaged in life and in his research,“ said Professor and Chair of Art Page Laughlin. “He was engaged in visual culture, but brought a different perspective to it because of his connection to film studies. He enjoyed teaching critical theory and I told him I personally would like to sit in on his seminar because his students got so much out of it.”

Brunette was scheduled to spend the fall semester teaching Italian cinema and Italian literature at Wake Forest’s Casa Artom house in Venice. Kairoff, director of the Casa Artom program, said he was a perfect choice to teach there. “He was a warm hearted and outgoing person who loved Italy. His family background was Italian. He spoke Italian fluently and was quite at home in all things Italian, especially Italian cinema. He was widely read, loved music and food, and was passionate about art.”

Even though Brunette was a well-known film scholar and critic, he loved teaching and was looking forward to spending the semester in Venice, Kairoff added. The University was notifying students who were scheduled to study there this fall and identifying other faculty members who could take Brunette’s place. “He talked often about his students and courses, and he especially loved Wake Forest students,” Kairoff said. “When he came to Wake Forest, he said the students were so bright and energetic, and he enjoyed getting to know them.”

Alex Saks (’09), who founded the Reynolda Film Festival, run by students, turned to Brunette for advice when starting the festival in 2008. “He took such an interest and wanted to foster the love of film. Without his help, advice and constant encouragement, I doubt we would have done what we did with the Film Festival,” she said.

Brunette graduated from Duquesne University in 1965 and received his masters there in 1967. He received a PhD in English and film from the University of Wisconsin in 1975.

He was the author of several books on filmmakers, including, most recently, “Michael Haneke,” a biography of the Austrian director. He was working on a book on Italian filmmaker Luchino Visconti. He had also written books on filmmakers Roberto Rossellini, Michelangelo Antonioni and Wong Kar-wai, and he was the editor of the filmmaker interview series of books at the University Press of Mississippi. He also served as a commentator on numerous DVDs.

"Peter was such a wonderful man, a dear friend and a wonderful colleague," the film festival’s artistic director, Deborah Young, told The Hollywood Reporter. Scott Macaulay, writing in Filmmaker, said Brunette “was an extraordinarily kind and generous man.”

 

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