Following a short film called
The First Day (1980), a docu-drama starring
Miranda Richardson, Kanievska's career as a feature director began in earnest with
Another Country (1984), a British romantic historical drama written by
Julian Mitchell and adapted from
his play of the same title. The film is loosely based on the life of the spy and double agent
Guy Burgess and explores his homosexuality and exposure to Marxism while examining the hypocrisy and snobbery of the English public school system. Starring
Rupert Everett and
Colin Firth, the film was entered into the
1984 Cannes Film Festival where it won the award for Best Artistic Contribution. It was also nominated for three BAFTA Awards in 1984: Editing (
Gerry Hambling), Most Outstanding Newcomer to Film (Rupert Everett), and Adapted Screenplay (Julian Mitchell). Encountering Kanievska for the first time on set, Everett recalls "Marek was an eccentric Pole, only ten years older than most of the actors and quite unlike the normal British director of those times. He was not class-obsessed and did not put himself on a pedestal." Of his visual aesthetic Everett recalls, "He was addicted to complicated tracking shots where the camera is put on a kind of railway and moves around during the action, like a silent voyeur … Marek directed it beautifully.
Another Country was the best-made film of my career." Kanievska followed this with
Less than Zero (1987) an American drama very loosely based on
Bret Easton Ellis'
novel of the same name. The film stars
Andrew McCarthy as Clay, a college freshman returning home for Christmas to spend time with his ex-girlfriend Blair (
Jami Gertz) and his friend Julian (
Robert Downey, Jr.), who is struggling with drug addiction. The film presents a look at the culture of wealthy, decadent youth in 1980s
Los Angeles. Ellis, initially hostile to the film over liberties taken with the source material was interviewed in 2006 saying that he has "really warmed up to it now." Still maintaining the movie bears little resemblance to his novel, he goes on to say, "… it's a beautiful looking film … I don't know any other movies that caught that period in LA so well."
Less than Zero was voted as the 22nd best film set in Los Angeles in the last 25 years by a group of
Los Angeles Times writers and editors. == Commercials==