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Brontis Jodorowsky
Brontis Jodorowsky
from Wikipedia

Brontis Jodorowsky (born 27 October 1962) is a Mexican-French actor and theatre director.

Key Information

Personal life

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Brontis Jodorowsky was born on October 27, 1962 in Mexico. He is the son of Chilean-French writer, director, and actor Alejandro Jodorowsky[1] and French actress Bernadette Landru.

His daughter, the actress Alma Jodorowsky, was born in France.

Career

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Jodorowsky had his first film experience as a prominent role in his father's 1970 film El Topo.

When he was twelve years old, his father cast him in a planned film adaptation of Dune by Frank Herbert. He was trained to play the part of the novel's protagonist, Paul Atreides. He had been taught by Jean-Pierre Vignau, a famous French coach in Japanese jujitsu, karate, judo, aikido, and also knife and sword combat. His training was intensive: 6 hours a day, seven days a week over a period of two years until the film project was shelved. In the documentary Jodorowsky's Dune Brontis described the training as painful and merciless.[2]

Jodorowsky received his acting training in Parisian theatres and at the Conservatoire Darius Milhaud du XIVe [de]. In 2011 he attended a three-month workshop at the New York Film Academy and in 2013 graduated from the Studio-théâtre d'Asnières [fr] in France.[3]

He also has a career in theatre, directing and performing in numerous plays, most of them in Paris. Many of his works were presented at the Théâtre Du Soleil. He is also known for his Atrides series of plays.[4] (Atreides is both the name of descendants of the Greek mythological figure Atreus and the name of the protagonist family in Frank Herbert's Dune novels.)

In 2009, he wrote and directed a play with his father and was also an actor in Le Gorille (The Gorilla) which became one of his better-known pieces.[5]

In the film La Danza De La Realidad (The Dance Of Reality), he had to play the role of his grandfather Jaime whom he'd never known or seen in person, since he died before Brontis was born. Through his father's direction of the film, he discovered much about his father and what he had endured over his lifetime.[6] He reprised the role of Jaime Jodorowsky in the film's sequel, Endless Poetry, which, like La Danza De La Realidad, was also inspired by his father's life experiences, this time focusing on Alejandro's youth and discovery of poetry.

In 2018, Jodorowsky played alchemist Nicolas Flamel in Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald, his first blockbuster role.[7]

Theatre

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Plays (as director)

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Plays (as actor)

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Filmography

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Year Title Role Notes
1970 El Topo Hijo (title character's son) Film by his father, Alejandro Jodorowsky
1971 Pubertinaje First part only
1974 El muro del silencio Daniel
1981 Black Mirror
1989 Santa Sangre Orderly 1 Film by his father, Alejandro Jodorowsky
1999 Gialloparma Fabrizio
2005 J'ai Vu Tuer Ben Barka Graphologie expert.
2007 Le Voyageur De La Toussaint Docteur Sauvaget TV movie
2010 A Season Of Jodorowsky Himself Documentary. Short.
2012 Táu Gustavo
2013 The Dance of Reality Jaime Film by his father, Alejandro Jodorowsky
2013 Jodorowsky's Dune Himself Documentary about Alejandro Jodorowsky
2015 Anton Tchékhov 1890 Alexandre Tchekhov
2016 The Darkness Gustavo
Endless Poetry Jaime Film by his father, Alejandro Jodorowsky
2017 Opus Zero Zero
2018 Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald Nicolas Flamel
2025 Magellan Bispo Juan de Fonseca

He is also credited in the short film Echek in the "thanks" section.[8]

Television series

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Character: Landis Episode: Flashback

Character: Patrick Venderlen Episode: Vents contraires

Voice dub

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  • Matrimoni (1998)

Character: Paolo Sessanelli

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Brontis Jodorowsky (born 27 October 1962) is a Mexican-French actor and theatre director best known for his early roles in his father Alejandro Jodorowsky's cult films El Topo (1970) and The Holy Mountain (1973), as well as later collaborations in autobiographical projects like The Dance of Reality (2013) and Endless Poetry (2016). Born in to the Chilean-French filmmaker and his wife, Brontis began his acting career at age seven, debuting as the child protagonist in El Topo, a surreal Western that marked his father's breakthrough as a director. He followed with the role of the Thief in The Holy Mountain (1973), another psychedelic allegory exploring spirituality and power. In 1974, at age 11, he received the Diosa de Plata award for Best Child Actor for his performance in the Mexican drama El Muro del Silencio. After moving in 1979, Jodorowsky shifted focus to , collaborating with renowned directors such as and , and starring in the play Le Gorille. He expanded into opera direction, helming productions of Debussy's Pelléas et Mélisande (2009), Verdi's (2011), and Bizet's (2012). His film career continued with supporting roles in international projects, including the historical drama 7 Days in (2018), the medieval epic The Last Duel (2021), and a cameo as the alchemist in Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of (2018), as well as recent roles in the television series The New Look (2024) and the film Magellan (2025). In his father's later works, he portrayed his own grandfather in The Dance of Reality, blending autobiography with psychomagic elements.

Early life

Birth and upbringing

Brontis Jodorowsky was born on October 27, 1962, in , , to Chilean-French filmmaker and artist and French actress Bernadette Landru. His early childhood unfolded in a bohemian and artistic household deeply shaped by his father's explorations in surrealist theater, film, and performance during Mexico's vibrant cultural scene of the . The Jodorowsky family resided in amid Alejandro's immersion in experimental arts, including the founding of the radical Teatro Pánico collective in 1962, which infused daily life with unconventional creativity and intellectual fervor. This environment exposed young Brontis to a world of imaginative expression from an early age, fostering his innate connection to the performing arts. At age 7, during the 1969 production of his father's groundbreaking film , Brontis experienced his first on-set involvement, portraying the director's young son in a pivotal role that thrust him into the intensity of filmmaking. This debut not only captured a formative moment in his life but also initiated a profound, lifelong engagement with performance, blending familial bonds with professional immersion in the arts. The family's relocation to France in 1979 marked a significant shift, transitioning Brontis from Mexico's dynamic, experimental milieu to the structured yet innovative European theater landscape, where he would later hone his craft. This move broadened his cultural horizons and integrated him into French artistic circles, laying the groundwork for his subsequent development as an and director.

Family background

Brontis Jodorowsky is the eldest son of the Chilean-French filmmaker, , and writer and the French actress Bernadette Landru. His parents married in the early 1960s while living in , where Brontis was born, and they collaborated in theater, including performances associated with Jodorowsky's experimental group Gelsen Gas. This artistic partnership shaped the family's early environment, blending performance, , and creative exploration. He has three younger half-brothers from his father's subsequent marriage to Valerie Jodorowsky: Adan Jodorowsky, a and ; Axel Jodorowsky, a visual artist and ; and Teo Jodorowsky, an and . Each brother has pursued careers in , contributing to the Jodorowsky family's reputation as a creative dynasty marked by interdisciplinary involvement in , , theater, and . Brontis is the father of , born on September 26, 1991, a French actress recognized for her roles in films such as Blue Is the Warmest Color (2013). As the eldest son in this influential family, Brontis has often balanced his own professional path with the collective legacy, maintaining a sense of independence amid their shared creative ethos.

Theatre career

As an actor

Brontis Jodorowsky transitioned to theatre acting in the late 1970s after his early exposure to film, moving to France in 1979 and training under influential figures such as Ryszard Cieślak, a key performer from Jerzy Grotowski's Teatr Laboratorium, and Ariane Mnouchkine of the Théâtre du Soleil. This formative period in Paris laid the groundwork for his stage career, where he immersed himself in experimental and classical repertory, drawing initial inspiration from his family's artistic milieu. His early theatre work emphasized ensemble performances in ambitious adaptations of ancient texts. A seminal role came in Ariane Mnouchkine's monumental production of Les Atrides (1990–1991), a four-part cycle drawing from Aeschylus and Euripides, where Jodorowsky appeared across Iphigénie à Aulis, Agamemnon, Les Choéphores, and Orestie, contributing to the chorus and supporting characters in this physically demanding, multicultural exploration of Greek tragedy. This collaboration with Mnouchkine highlighted his ability to embody ritualistic and poetic elements in large-scale ensemble work, marking his integration into Paris's avant-garde theatre scene. Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, Jodorowsky built versatility across dramatic and experimental genres, often in supporting roles that evolved toward more prominent leads. With , he performed in her 2001 adaptation of (after Shakespeare), showcasing his command of romantic intensity in a modernized classic. Under , he took on a key role in Merlin ou la Terre dévastée by Tankred Dorst (2005), a poetic meditation on Arthurian myth and environmental ruin, demonstrating his skill in symbolic, ensemble-driven narratives. Jodorowsky's collaborations with Bernard Sobel further underscored his range in Brechtian and Shakespearean works, including Un homme est un homme (2004) and Troilus et Cressida (2005), where he navigated alienation effects and epic satire with precision. Similarly, in Simon Abkarian's L'Ultime chant de Troie (early 2000s), he contributed to a raw, contemporary retelling of Homeric themes, emphasizing visceral physicality. With Lukas Hemleb, his performance in La Marquise d'O... (after Heinrich von Kleist, 2006) at the Théâtre Gérard Philipe explored psychological ambiguity in a chamber drama, reflecting his growing affinity for introspective leads. By the 2010s, Jodorowsky had solidified his presence in Paris theatre, amassing over 25 productions across four decades and transitioning to more central roles in intimate, text-driven pieces. In Le Gorille (2009, revived 2011 and 2019), an adaptation of Franz Kafka's "," he portrayed the simian protagonist's desperate bid for humanity, blending , narration, and raw emotion in a solo-inflected performance that ran for extended seasons at venues like the Théâtre du Petit and Théâtre du Lucernaire. This role exemplified his evolution toward versatile, character-focused work in , sustaining a career rooted in 's vibrant stages.

As a director

Brontis Jodorowsky transitioned into directing in the early , drawing on his decades-long career to take creative control of productions in Parisian and regional French venues. His work spans classical adaptations, contemporary dramas, and operas, often featuring ensemble casts in intimate or experimental settings that emphasize psychological depth and narrative surprise. Over the course of his directorial output, he has helmed around 10 major stage productions, establishing a presence in France's scene through focused, venue-specific stagings. Key among his early directorial efforts was the 2004 production of Molière's Le Médecin volant at Le Lucernaire in Paris, a fast-paced farce that highlighted his skill in directing comedic timing and physical ensemble work. The same year, he staged Jean Genet's Haute surveillance at the Institut Phonographique de l’Est in Paris, a tense psychological drama set in a prison cell that explored themes of isolation and power dynamics through stark, confined blocking. Jodorowsky also directed Christian Ferrari's original piece Qu'est-ce que ça peut faire? at the Auditorium des Halles in Paris during 2004, blending surreal elements with everyday absurdities in a compact, introspective format. These productions marked his entry into leading experimental and classical works, adapting avant-garde influences for accessible stage interpretations. In later years, Jodorowsky revisited contemporary texts, directing Fabrice Melquiot's L'Inattendu—a play about unforeseen encounters and emotional reckoning—first in 2004 at the Studio-Théâtre de Charenton and in a revised version in 2011 at Théâtre Les Déchargeurs in . Critics praised the 2011 staging for its sobriety, justesse, and poetic revival of Melquiot's style, noting Jodorowsky's inspired approach to intimate character revelations. His directorial scope expanded to with the 2009 mounting of Claude Debussy's Pelléas et Mélisande at the Théâtre Musical de , a symbolist work delving into forbidden desires and family secrets, followed by Giuseppe Verdi's in 2011 at the same venue and Georges Bizet's in 2012 at Festival Musica Nigella. These efforts reflect his versatility in guiding performers through musical and dramatic tensions, often in collaboration with composers and designers to enhance thematic intimacy. Jodorowsky's productions have garnered positive reception in French theatre circles for their precise, ensemble-driven executions that balance classical fidelity with modern psychological insight, contributing to his reputation as a director attuned to both heritage texts and innovative voices. While occasionally overlapping with his acting roles in dual-capacity projects, his directing emphasizes leadership in exploring identity and relational dynamics on stage.

Film career

Early roles

Brontis Jodorowsky made his film debut at the age of seven in his father's surrealist Western (1970), portraying the titular character's young son who accompanies him on a violent quest through the desert.https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0067866/fullcredits/ This role, facilitated by familial connections in the Mexican , marked his entry into cinema amid the countercultural wave of the era.https://www.moriareviews.com/fantasy/topo-1970-el-topo.htm He followed with the role of the Thief in his father's The Holy Mountain (1973).https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0070345/fullcredits Following El Topo, Jodorowsky was cast at age 12 as , the protagonist of his father's ambitious but ultimately unproduced adaptation of (planned for 1974–1976). To prepare, he underwent intensive training in , , and horseback riding for up to six hours daily over two years, aiming to embody the messianic figure in what was envisioned as a psychedelic epic featuring a star-studded cast including and .https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20190312-is-jodorowskys-dune-the-greatest-film-never-made The project's collapse due to funding issues and studio disinterest halted its production after a 14-month effort, depriving Jodorowsky of a potential breakout lead role and redirecting his early career toward fewer opportunities in film.https://sonyclassics.com/jodorowskysdune/ Jodorowsky's subsequent film work in the 1970s remained limited to a handful of roles in Mexican productions, including a segment in the anthology Pubertinaje (1971) and the lead in El Muro del Silencio (1974), a about and family dynamics for which he received the Diosa de Plata award for Best Child Actor.https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0221498/fullcredits/ https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0199791/fullcredits/ https://www.endlesspoetrythemovie.com/crew After relocating to France in 1979, his screen appearances became even sparser through the 1980s and 2000s, totaling only 3–5 credited film roles as he prioritized a burgeoning theatre career; notable among these were (1981), a small role as Orderly 1 in his father's (1989), and a graphology expert in the political thriller J'ai vu tuer Ben Barka (2005). https://www.romanianactors.com/brontis-jodorowsky-being-an-actor-is-a-very-miserable-condition-because-you-always-depend-on-somewhere-else/

Collaborations with Alejandro Jodorowsky

Brontis Jodorowsky's collaborations with his father, Alejandro Jodorowsky, include projects from childhood and an early adult role, with a series resuming in 2013, marking a return to familial artistic synergy. These works, primarily autobiographical and surreal in later instances, allowed Brontis to explore themes of legacy and personal history through roles that bridged generations. In The Dance of Reality (2013), an autobiographical surreal drama directed by Alejandro Jodorowsky, Brontis portrayed his grandfather, Jaime Jodorowsky, the tyrannical father figure central to the director's childhood narrative. This role humanized the abusive patriarch, transforming a negative archetype into a more empathetic character as part of the film's psychomagic approach to family therapy. Brontis described the experience as a profound reconciliation, noting how embodying Jaime allowed him to address inherited traumas and foster healing within the family dynamic. Brontis reprised the role of in Endless Poetry (2016), the second installment of Alejandro's poetic , which delves into the director's youth in and his emergence as an artist. Here, appears as the stern father during Alejandro's formative years, contributing to the film's exploration of against familial expectations and the pursuit of creative freedom. The collaboration underscored the Jodorowsky family's involvement, with Brontis's performance adding emotional depth to the surreal depiction of generational conflict and poetic awakening. Brontis also contributed insights to Jodorowsky's Dune (2013), a documentary directed by Frank Pavich chronicling Alejandro's ambitious but unrealized 1970s adaptation of Frank Herbert's novel. As the intended lead actor—cast at age 12 to play after two years of intensive training—Brontis provided archival context and personal reflections on the project's influence, highlighting its lasting impact on cinema despite its failure to materialize. His involvement emphasized the familial stakes in Alejandro's visionary endeavors. These later collaborations collectively embodied themes of and reconciliation, with Brontis articulating in interviews how psychomagic—his father's therapeutic practice blending and psychology—facilitated emotional resolution. By reenacting painful histories, the projects served as acts of redemption, allowing the Jodorowskys to rewrite and heal intergenerational wounds through surreal .

Later independent roles

Following his collaborations with family members, Brontis Jodorowsky returned to leading roles in independent cinema with the 2012 Mexican thriller Táu, directed by Daniel Castro Zimbrón, where he portrayed the biologist Gustavo, a character haunted by mystical events in the Wirikuta desert during a expedition. This film represented a breakthrough, reestablishing his presence in feature films after years primarily devoted to . Jodorowsky continued with diverse independent projects, including the 2015 biographical drama Anton Tchékhov 1890, directed by Konstantin Lopushansky, in which he played Alexandre Tchekhov, the writer's brother, exploring the early influences on Anton Chekhov's life in . In 2016, he took the role of Gustavo in The Darkness (Las tinieblas), another thriller by Daniel Castro Zimbrón, depicting a man's descent into paranoia amid familial isolation in a remote cabin. That same year, he appeared as Otto in Antonio Chavarrías's The Chosen (El elegido), a set during the . By 2017, Jodorowsky's versatility expanded into European and international productions, starring as Zero in Opus Zero, directed by , a mystery involving a composer () investigating a disappearance in a Mexican village. He also played Oscar in Nathalie Marchak's Par instinct (Out of Instinct), a about a French lawyer's emotional journey toward motherhood in . In 2018, he earned a prominent supporting role as Denis in Bayoneta, directed by Kyzza Teran, portraying a mentor figure to a retired boxer navigating life in . That year marked his Hollywood entry as the alchemist in Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of , directed by , a fantasy blockbuster in the universe, as well as a supporting role as Muki in the historical thriller 7 Days in .https://www.imdb.com/title/tt4126382/ Jodorowsky's independent film work further diversified in 2021 with a role as in Ridley Scott's The Last Duel, set in medieval and focusing on a involving themes of and accusation. His theatre-honed skills in nuanced character portrayal enhanced these performances across genres. In 2023, he appeared in Alessandro Pugno's Animal/Humano, a fable intertwining human ambition and animal destiny through parallel narratives of a boy aspiring to and a calf's fate. In 2025, he starred as Jacob in , directed by Rax Rinnekangas, and appeared in Debt to the Dead, directed by Daniel Castro Zimbrón, alongside his role as Bispo Juan de Fonseca in Lav Diaz's epic Magellan, a decolonial retelling of the explorer's voyages starring . Over this period, Jodorowsky contributed to approximately 10 s, spanning Mexican thrillers, European dramas, and Hollywood fantasy, demonstrating his international range.

Television and voice work

Television appearances

Brontis Jodorowsky's television work has been sporadic, primarily consisting of supporting roles in French productions from the early onward, often in dramatic TV movies and guest spots on series, allowing him to showcase his versatility honed through . His appearances emphasize character-driven parts in crime and mystery genres, with no recurring series commitments amid his focus on and . In 2002, Jodorowsky appeared in the Belgian-French series , playing the role of Landis in the episode "Flashback," a thriller involving corporate intrigue. Three years later, in 2005, he portrayed an expert in in the TV movie J'ai vu tuer Ben Barka, a historical drama about the abduction and murder of Moroccan opposition leader . Jodorowsky's 2006 guest spot came in the long-running French series Joséphine, ange gardien, where he contributed to an episode centered on supernatural guidance and personal dilemmas, fitting his background in nuanced dramatic performances. The following year, 2007, saw two notable roles: as Docteur Sauvaget in the TV movie Le Voyageur de la Toussaint, a period mystery set during , and as Patrick Venderlen in the episode "Vents contraires" of the police procedural Section de recherches, investigating complex crimes. More recently, in 2020, Jodorowsky played David Barber in a single episode of the thriller series , which explores themes of and in a high-stakes . In 2024, he appeared as Commander Resnais in the episode "The Hour" of the Apple TV+ historical drama series The New Look. Overall, these credits highlight his selective engagement with television, prioritizing roles that align with his theatrical depth rather than extensive broadcasting.

Voice dubbing

Brontis Jodorowsky's involvement in voice centers on French-language adaptations of international films and series, a facet of his career that emerged in the late and aligns with his established persona in mature, eccentric roles. His residence, established since 1979, has positioned him advantageously within the French media landscape for such audio contributions. A notable early credit includes the voice of Sessanelli in the French post-synchronized version of Cristina Comencini's Matrimoni (), where he lent his distinctive timbre to the character's introspective dialogue. His acting experience enhances these vocal performances, infusing them with emotional depth and authenticity. While he has focused on French projects, Jodorowsky has no significant English-language work.

References

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