June 1 - June 5, 2026 Isabelle Huppert: A Bleak Week Tribute Series | THE PIANO TEACHER, LA CÉRÉMONIE, VIOLETTE NOZIÈRE, ELLE, TIME OF THE WOLF, HEAVEN’S GATE Tickets go on sale today at 12:00pm PT
Photo courtesy of © Marie Rouge / Unifrance ABOUT THE SERIES: As the centerpiece program of the fifth annual ‘Bleak Week: Cinema of Despair,’ the American Cinematheque is honored to welcome the incomparable French actor Isabelle Huppert for an in-person tribute. Six of her remarkable films are featured in the series, celebrating the performances of Huppert that have cemented her as one of the most fearless actors in the world. Spanning decades of her work, the tribute highlights her collaborations with powerhouse auteurs Michael Haneke and Claude Chabrol, among others, and showcases her extraordinary range and the consistency of her craft. Opening this year’s festival is THE PIANO TEACHER, a film of repression and obsession that has captivated audiences for 25 years. In her first collaboration with Haneke, Huppert delivers an equally mesmerizing and disturbing portrayal of a piano teacher with masochistic urges, whose affair with a younger student is executed with such control and elusiveness that it appears more unearthed than performed. Widely regarded as one of her defining roles, this performance has earned Huppert numerous accolades and continues to be a major influence of contemporary acting. In her second collaboration with Haneke, TIME OF THE WOLF, Huppert does not change her performance style so much as transpose its restraint into an entirely different context. Here, in a post-apocalyptic setting, her performance draws tension more from her effort to maintain moral boundaries amid fear and grief, rather than the external collapse around her. A major through line in her work is that Huppert does not reveal everything to the audience. Even as a vital force in portraying class struggle and social disruption in the films of Claude Chabrol, she is a master of nuanced subtlety. Her role in LA CÉRÉMONIE deviates from her typical cool, restrained style; however, as Jeanne appears loud and chaotic, Huppert maintains a tight control on the performance. In VIOLETTE NOZIÈRE, a story of a teenager’s violent rebellion against authority, Huppert’s character becomes the focus of a scandal while maintaining an unsettling calm and ambiguity, her motives deliberately unresolved. Across a wide-ranging body of work, Huppert has consistently demonstrated a discerning eye for complex, substantial films, guided by clear artistic integrity. From early projects like HEAVEN’S GATE, a controversial revisionist Western, Huppert’s steely presence has always been compelling. In the black comedy ELLE, she pairs that blank yet confounding presence with sharp humor, transforming a bleak and provocative story into a complex portrait of psychology. A feat that few actors could achieve, this reflects her ability to perform extreme material with emotional precision. Join us as we honor Isabelle Huppert and her contribution to cinema’s best and bleakest. Thank you to our airline sponsor, Delta Air Lines.