Stand by · pulling the latest frames
Stand by · pulling the latest frames

Todd Haynes (/heɪnz/; born January 2, 1961; Los Angeles) is an American filmmaker. His films span four decades with themes examining the personalities of well-known musicians, dysfunctional and dystopian societies, and blurred gender roles. Haynes first gained public attention with his controversial short film Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story (1987), which chronicles singer Karen Carpenter's life and death, using Barbie dolls as actors. Superstar became a cult classic. Haynes's feature directorial debut, Poison (1991), a provocative exploration of AIDS-era queer perceptions and subversions, established him as a figure of a new transgressive cinema. Poison won the Sundance Film Festival's Grand Jury Prize and is regarded as a seminal work of New Queer Cinema.

Barbara Forever
2026
5.4Fabulous! The Story of Queer Cinema
2006

Natural History
1989
5.8At Sundance
1995
5.8Swoon
1992
6.0Xavier Dolan: Bound to Impossible
2016

Eine Zärtlichkeit wie bei Sirk - Todd Haynes über Fassbinder und das Melodram
2006
6.1Great Directors
2009
10.0At the Video Store
2019
7.0Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story
1987
8.0Douglas Sirk – Hope as in Despair
2022

Art-House America: Austin Film Society
2023
4.0Assassins: A Film Concerning Rimbaud
1985

Infinite Pleasure: Todd Haynes on Max Ophuls' Le Plaisir
2006