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Directors
Up one level
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Marco Kalantari
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Born in 1974 in Vienna, Kalantari studied as a producer and as a director at the renowned
Film Academy of his hometown. A science fiction fan, he made a number of sci fi short
films while intensively working in the advertisement field (he is the author of the awarded
commercial for Medecins Sans Frontieres)
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Brian Yuzna
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Actor, screenwriter, producer and film director. He is one of the modern creators of the
fantastic/horror genre. In 1989, he worked for Disney as a producer and met Stuart Gordon, who has also worked for Fantastic Factory. His most significant films as a director are: Society, Bride of Re-Animator, Silent Night, Deadly Night 4, The Dentist and The Progeny.
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Eugenio Mira
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Born in Castalla (Alicante, Spain) in 1977, Eugenio Mira directed his first short film Fade and soon after saw it premiered at the Sitges International Fantastic Film Festival in 2000.
Fade received international critical recognition. The Birthday is his first feature film as director
and co-writer with Mikel Alvariño.
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Louis Pepe, Keith Fulton
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The two authors directed two making-of documentaries on Terry Gilliam’s films: The Hamster Factor and Other Tales of Twelve Monkeys, about the production of Twelve Monkeys and Lost in La Mancha, a look at the filming of Gilliam’s abandoned version of Don Quixote. Brothers of the Head is their first feature film.
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Kiriya Kazuaki
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Kiriya Kazuaki (Tokyo,1968) moved to the United States in 1983. He returned to Tokyo
in 1997, and continued his successful career as a photographer, shooting album covers for musicians like Robbie Williams and Utada Hikaru, his wife and famous Japanese pop star for whom he has also directed various video clips. Casshern is his first full-length film.
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Kevin Willmott
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Kevin Willmott was born in Junction City, Kansas. A civil rights activist, he combined
political activity with writing: he collaborated with some of the most important American
directors. C.S.A., screened at the Sundance film festival, is presented by Spike Lee.
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Shinji Aoyama
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He was born in Kita-Kyushu, Japan, in 1964. He began making films in 8mm at Rikkyo
University, where he was deeply influenced by the courses of film critic Hasumi Shigehiko.
He has worked as an assistant director for Kurosawa Kiyoshi, Fridrik Thür Fridriksson and
Daniel Schmidt. As a writer and critic, he contributes to several magazines.
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Ömer Faruk Sorak
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He was born in Ankara 1964. He shot the dramas named Kurtulus, Yayla Türküsü and
Sahte Dünyalar. He made the documentaries Süryaniler, Güllerle Karanfil. After 1995, he started working as a director of photography and director. In 1997 he founded the Böcek Productions creating commercials, video clips, TV programs and cinema films.
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Hiroki Yamaguchi
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In 1997, Japanese filmmaker Hiroki Yamaguchi made his directorial debut with the
award-winning Midnight Viscera. He was only 19 at the time. His ambitious followup, Gusher no binds me, took Yamaguchi several years to complete. Yamaguchi made this ambitious film largely independent of the Japanese film industry.
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Dave McKean
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Born in 1963, he attended Berkshire College of Art and Design. In 1986 he met author
Neil Gaiman with whom he has collaborated on Violent Cases, Mr. Punch and the popular
Sandman series. In 1997 he directed the short films Whack!, The Week Before and n[e]on. He produced the image to launch The Playstation and the TV commercial for Nike
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Vincenzo Natali
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He starts to draw storyboards for films like Babar, Tintin, Beetlejuice and Johnny Mnemonic. In 1996, the foundation for Cube is laid with the short feature Elevated. What happens next is history. Cube goes around the globe, sweeping up the awards with ease. Vincenzo Natali wins in 2002 Golden Raven at the BIFFF with Cypher.
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Áron Gauder
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A 1999 graduate of the Hungarian Academy of Applied Arts, he is renowned in Hungary
for his mixed media animation techniques. His short films include Klaustrofobie, Bersecker,
Wondermill, Helping Soul and the documentary Iceland. His first feature, The District!, is based on his animated television series of the same name.
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Daniel Roby
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Daniel Roby began his career working as a director of photography on several short films and moved on to shoot Michel Jetté’s feature film Hochelaga. In 1995, Roby founded a production company called La Mafia (then renamed Zone Films) and developed several short films.
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Aleksey Fedorchenko
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Aleksey Fedorchenko was born in 1966 in Sole-Ileck, in Russia. In 2002 he delves into
documentary films. His documentary debut David takes part in many film festivals. Writer of the short film Okhota na zaytsev (directed by Igor Volochin), the film was awarded the grandprix at IFF Mexico 2004.
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Stephen Quay / Timothy Quay
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Born in 1947 in Pennsylvania, Timothy and Stephen Quay exploit their artistry in animation and their baroque fantasy in experimental cinema, commercials, music clips, as well as theatre. Before Piano Tuner of Earthquakes they made their first full feature, Institute Benjamenta, that already combined puppets and real actors.
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James Bai
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Born in Missouri, he made his first film animated on 10 stacks of Post-Its. After confirmation from his younger brother that the short was funny, Bai enrolled in Columbia University’s School of Film and after graduation he spents six months in Alaska to prepare his new features Puzzlehead.
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Joss Whedon
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The creator of the famous series Buffy the Vampire Slayer and its spin off Angel began his career as a staff writer on the ABC comedy series Roseanne. His feature film writing credits include Toy Story, Alien: Resurrection, X-man, Speed and Twister. He has also kept hand in the comic book industry. He is currently writing Astonishing X-men.
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Katsuhiro Ôtomo
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Born in Miyagi in 1954, Otomo began his career as a comic artist. In 1983 he starts to
direct Anime and in 1988 he makes the animation film Akira, fundamental contribution to the international affirmation of this specific film genre.
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Shinya Tsukamoto
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Shinya Tsukamoto is one of the most radical and innovative among Japanese directors. In
1988 he makes his first film, the cult Tetsuo. In 1995, with Tokyo Fist, he wins two prizes
at the Locarno International Film Festival, while since 1998 his films are regularly invited to the Venice Film Festival.
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András György Dési, Gábor Móray
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Igor Legarreta, Emilio Pérez
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Neil Bell, Marq Bailey
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Kristoph Tassin
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Roel Mondelaers, Raf Reyntjens
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Moritz Langer
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Grégory Valery
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Faisal A. Qureshi
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Oskar Santos
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Peter Volkart
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Jan Doense
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Michael Anderson
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Wolf Rilla
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Eugène Lourié
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Cy Endfield
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John Krish
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Nathan Juran
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Michael Reeves
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Nicolas Roeg
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Terry Gilliam
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Born in Minneapolis, Terry moved to England in 1967, where he
lives today with his wife Maggie and three children. He became the
only American member of the Monty Python’s Flying Circus TV Series.
His solo directorial debut was Jabberwocky (1977).
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Danny Boyle
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Michael Winterbottom
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Garth Jennings
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Georges Méliès
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Marcel Perez, Luigi Maggi
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Karel Zeman
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Olivier Smolders
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Born in 1956 in Léopoldville, Olivier Smolders is currently one of the most innovative
figures in experimental film circles. The author of various books on literature and the cinema,
as well as numerous articles published in different journals and magazines. He writes and
produces his short films via his own production company, “Les Films du Scarabée”.
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Mariano Equizzi
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Mariano Equizzi is a graduate of Palermo University with the degree of Doctor of Law. After
college, he worked as a freelance filmmaker in computer graphics applied to contemporary art for a local Galleries in Sicily.
He entered on the famous Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia the top film school in Rome.
There, he was Executive Producer for school’s feature film and he was a runner on feature films.
After Centro Sperimentale, Mr. Equizzi was first Assistant Director for Michele Soavi (“The
Lodge” and “The Church and Cemetery Man” with Rupert Everett) and developed many projects with Mr. Soavi.
From 1999 to 2002, Mr. Equizzi directed and produced with long time production partners Luca Liggio (producer - editor) and Paolo Bigazzi (sound designer) several Independent Italian Science Fiction Cult Feature and shorts (Syrena, Agent Z as well as many others).
In 2000, Equizzi created the web portal, www.ntxt.it that searches and investigates genre content through new technology and media, from flash to web casting.
During 2002, Mr Equizzi won the Premio Italia awarded by the World Science Fiction Association (WSFA).
In 2002, Mr Equizzi won the NOKIA-WIND contest with “New Order” an interactive techno
thriller based on MMS Technology.
In 2003, Mr Equizzi directed "The Mark" a horror film for Filmax and Surf Film, distributed by
NBC/Universal in Italy.Currently, Mr. Equizzi is now working on “Revenge,” a film about a secret lodge from the books of famous European writer, Valerio Evangelisti
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Sam Voutas
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Sam Voutas was raised in China and is a graduate of the Victorian College of the Arts. In addition to making several short films, Voutas is the director of the documentaries The Last Breadbox, about the tough world of Beijing cabbies, and Shanghai Bride. In Crash Test, Voutas plays the unfortunate writer who attempts to expose Motorkore.
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Rakesh Roshan
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After a successful stint as a hero, he turned producer with Aap Ke Deewane, Kaamchor and Jaag Utha Insaan and Bhagwan Dada. He decided to become an independent Director in 1986 with Khudgarz. The box-office success of the film spurred him on to produce and direct hit films like Khoon Bhari Maang, Kishen Kanhaiya, King Uncle, Karan Arjun, Koyla and Kaho Naa Pyaar Hai. Although he has directed films for other producers, he has now decided to concentrate on directing home productions only.
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Didier e Thierry Poiraud
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Both graduates of the Fine Arts School, the Poiraud brothers are the authors of Les Escaripns Sauvages, short film that combines animation and reality, winner of the Grand Prix of the Science Fiction Film Festival of Paris in 1994. The two brothers are known mainly for their commercials of Hollywood Chewing Gum and for the one of Pirelli with Marie-José Pérec.
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Marek Dobes
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In 1998 he graduated in the Master of Cinematographic Critic at Charles University College.He wrote and directed together with Stepan Kopriva the horror comedy "I was a teenage intellectual" winner of a Golden Award at the Huston Worldfest and one of the main award at the Australian Ebensee. Marek Dobes directed also the shorts "The executioner" and "Explicit evidence", and lots of music video.
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Flavio Moretti
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He was born in 1962 in Rovigo, Veneto, and subsequently moved to Turin. Always keen on animation, at 20 he works as camera operator assistant, creative artist and designer of animated films for Video-Film, specialist in commercials. In 1985, he makes his first short film Moments in Love , followed by other short films like: Wilbur e la Tv, La Fuga, Il Cerchio, successfully presented in many international festivals. Il Magico Natale di Rupert is his first full feature film.
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Jeff Renfroe e Martin Thorsson
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Jeff Renfroe was born and raised in Seattle and Marteinn Thorsson in Reykjavik. They met at Ryerson Polytechnic University in Toronto, where both graduated in 1993 with degrees in film studies. Since then, Renfroe has directed music videos and commercials in Toronto, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. Thorsson has directed commercials, and music videos in Iceland and Canada. He has also written film criticism and commentary. In 1999, they formed a directing partnership.
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Miguel Coyula
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Miguel Coyula was born in Havana in 1977. From 1999 to 2001, he has gained many awards at film festivals with short films such as Dancing on Needles, Nice Going, Clase Z Tropical and The Plastic Fork. After graduating from the International Film School of San Antonio de los Baños, Cuba, he went to New York where he was offered a scholarship at the Lee Strasberg Theatre Institute. It was while attending the Institute that Coyula made Red Cockroaches, his most ambitious project.
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Enric Folch
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Born near Barcelona, Spain, in 1964, he graduates in Communication Science before gaining an Overall Distinction in Cinema at The London International Film School. After directing some award winning short films he helmes his first full-lenght for TV in 1998, followed by Angel Hairs in 2000. Tempus Fugit is his third picture.
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Yasuaki Nakajima
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He was born in Hokkaido, Japan. A self-taught filmmaker, after high school, he went to Tokyo, where he honed his craft by shooting a short claymation film with Super-8 mm film camera in his apartment at night while working during the day as a highrise window cleaner. He moved to New York in 1996 to join the independent film community.
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Cory McAbee
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McAbee is the lead singer and songwriter for the musical group The Billy Nayer Show. Previous films include the animated shorts Billy Nayer, The Man on the Moon and The Ketchup and Mustard Man. McAbee has recently completed his next feature-length screenplay, entitled Werewolf Hunters of the Midwest, and is in the process of storyboarding.
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Jan Kounen
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In 1989, he makes a name for himself with the short film Gisele Kerosene, awarded with the Grand Prix of its category at the Festival of Avoriaz. At the beginning of the 1990s, Jan Kounen makes two new short films, Vibroboy and Le Petit Chaperon Rouge. In 1996, he makes his first full feature film, Dobermann. After Blueberry, he continues his study on shamanism with the documentary D’Autres Mondes.
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Paco Plaza
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Born in Valencia in 1973, Paco Plaza graduated from Valencia University with a Bachelor’s degree in Information Sciences. He also has a diploma in Film Direction from the Community of Madrid School of Film (ECAM). Second Name is his first feature film as a director, following extensive experience in the production of high-quality short films for which he has received numerous awards.
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Julian Richards
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Julian Richards was born in Newport, South Wales in 1968. In 1988, Richards joined The National Film & Television School where he was approached, while still only a first year student, to direct In With The Rent a Playhouse series for BBC Wales. In 1997, Julian wrote and directed his debut feature film Darklands which won The Méliès Award for Best European Fantasy Film and a year later the conspiracy thriller Silent Cry.
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Robert Pratten
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At 35 years of age and a successful, internationally recognized consultant to the telecoms industry, Pratten quit work in 2000 and started at the London Film School just a few yards from his former office. Now, four years on, he has written, directed and produced his first feature film.
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Andrew Lau
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Andrew Lau was born in Hong Kong in 1960 and started his career in the film industry as an assistant cinematographer with the Shaw Studio. His credits as a cinematographer include Fallen Angels, As Tears Go By, The Six Million Dollar Man, and Return to a Better Tomorrow. He began directing in 1991 and has made a name for himself by combining martial arts with computer-animated special effects. His 2002 release, Infernal Affairs, broke box-office records in Hong Kong.
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Ridley Scott
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Cult director Ridley Scott began his career as a commercial film director, shortly thereafter making his directorial debut for the TV series "Adam Adamant Lives!" in 1966. It took him 11 more years to deliver his first feature film, The Duellists, in which he showed off his blooming visual skill. His best films followed thereafter, Alien and Blade Runner, both science-fiction films which were setting the trend for years to come and remain highly influential today. It is these films that his cult reputation rests upon. Other good films of his are Legend,Thelma & Louise, White Squall and Gladiator.
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Val Guest
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Born in London in 1911, Val Guest began his career as a film journalist and columnist, and for a brief spell actor.
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Leslie Norman
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London 1911
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Peter Sykes
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Steven Spielberg
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A native of Cincinnati, Spielberg received praise after winning a contest for a film short "Escape To Nowhere", at just 13 years of age. In a bid to make it in the movie industry, Spielberg raised enough money from a close friend to make "Amblin", a film short that gained the attention of major Hollywood studios, and winning numerous film festival awards. Spielberg made his feature film debut in 1974 with "The Sugarland Express", which was followed a year later by the Oscar and Academy Award winning "Jaws". With direct reference to his early work, Spielberg's 'Amblin Entertainment' was thrown into the spotlight in 1982 with its first full length feature 'E.T.' Following many years of outstanding success with Amblin Entertainment, Spielberg extended his horizons and formed Dreamworks, a highly respected partnership with Jeffrey Katzenberg and David Geffen responsible for films such as Saving Private Ryan, Gladiator and Chicken Run.
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Andrzej Zulawski
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Andrzej Zulawski was born on the territory of what was then the U.S.S.R. in a Polish family with remarkable traditions in arts and literature. After World War II, his father's diplomatic career brought the family to France (1945-1949), Czechoslovakia (1949-1952), and finally to Poland. He studied film direction at IDHEC in Paris (1957-1959) and philosophy at both Warsaw University (1961) and Université de Paris (1962-1964).
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John Landis
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Michael Braun, Theo Mezger
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In the sixties, while Americans were discovering Star Trek, Germans were glued to the tube to follow the adventures of spaceship Orion. The special effects were years ahead of its time, accompanied by excellent camerawork, lighting, dialogues and a hit soundtrack that became the subject of countless dance floor remixes. Seven episodes of this supremely kitschy cult series have now been compiled into a highly enjoyable 90 minutes producer’s cut for the 21st century.
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Enki Bilal
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Born on October, 7 in 1951 in Belgrade, where he spends the first 10 years of his life. Son of a Czech mother and a Bosnian father, he discovers Paris in 1961, at the same time as he discovers comic books and cinema. From 1980 onwards he works on La foire aux immortels, first part of what will become La TriLoGie NiKoPoL. He turns to cinema, starting from the collaboration with A. Resnais for the setting of La Vie est un Roman and then making his first full feature film, BunKer Palace Hotel.
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Seth Holt
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Seth Holt began as an assistant editor at Ealing in 1944, graduating to editor (1949), producer (1955) and director (1958).He returned to editing for Charles Crichton's The Battle of the Sexes (1959) and for Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1960). Probably his best known film is The Nanny (1965), with Bette Davis. He was working on Blood from the Mummy's Tomb (1971) when he died.
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Richard Kelly
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Born and raised in Virginia to a family of engineers, he moved out West to attend the University of Southern California in the School of Fine Arts. He made two short films (The Goodbye Place and Visceral Matter) before graduating in 1997. Donnie Darko became a one-of-a-kind phenomenon.
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Joseph Losey
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Belonging to an important family clan in Wisconsin, Joseph Losey studied philosophy but was always interested in theater and thus worked together with Bertolt Brecht. After directing some shorts for MGM, he made his first important film, The Boy with Green Hair (1948), for RKO. While he was filming The Prowler (1951) in Italy he was summoned to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee, the congressional committee charged with "rooting out" Communist "subversion" in the motion picture industry. Unwilling to subject himself to the committee's well-known intimidation tactics, Losey decided to seek exile in Great Britain. In the following years he used a pseudonym--"Joseph Walton"--for his films, which were of minor quality. He regained his prestige with the thrillers Blind Date (1959), The Criminal (1960) and Eva (1962). From that point on his films varied between top-quality work like Accident (1967) and much lower-quality projects such as Modesty Blaise (1966), which was a box-office success, and Galileo (1975), which wasn't.
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Terence Fisher
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Terence Fisher (1904-1980) was a film director who worked for Hammer Films. He was born in Maida Vale, England. Fisher was arguably one of the most influential horror directors of the second half of the 20th century. He was the first to bring gothic horror alive in full Technicolor, and the gore, sexual overtones and explicit horror in his films, while mild by today's standards, were unprecedented in his day. His first major gothic horror film was The Curse of Frankenstein (1957), which launched Hammer's long association with the genre and made British actors Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee leading horror stars of the era. He went on to film a number of adaptations of classic horror subjects, including Dracula (1958), The Hound of the Baskervilles (1959) and The Mummy (1959). Given their subject matter and lurid approach, Fisher's films, though commercially successful, were largely dismissed by critics during his career. It is only in recent years that Fisher has become recognised as an auteur in his own right. His films are characterised by a blend of fairy-tale, myth and sexuality. They draw heavily on Christian themes, and there is usually a hero who defeats the powers of darkness by a combination of faith in God and reason, in contrast to other characters, who are either blindly superstitious or bound by a cold, godless rationalism (as noted by critic Paul Leggett in Terence Fisher: Horror, Myth and Religion, 2001). For a detailed discussion of Fisher's works, see The Charm of Evil: The Films of Terence Fisher by Wheeler Winston Dixon (Metuchen N.J. and London: Scarecrow Press, 1991).
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Roy Ward Baker
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Roy Ward Baker's first job in films was as a teaboy at the Gainsborough Studios in London, England, but within three years he was working as an assistant director. During World War II, he worked in the Army Kinematograph Unit under Eric Ambler, a writer and film producer, who, after the war, gave Baker his first opportunity to direct a film, The October Man (1947). He then went to Hollywood in 1952 and stayed for seven years, returning to Britain in 1958, when he directed one of his best films, A Night to Remember (1958). During the 1960s and 1970s, Baker directed a number of horror films for Hammer and Amicus. He also directed in British television, especially during the latter part of his career.
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Ricardo Ribeles
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Ricardo Ribelles is a Spanish comic artist who has done work
for magazine Rambla. He is the director and graphic artist of the
fantasy movie Exorcio Deus Machina, based on his characters. El
Baron is his first feature film.
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Thomas Bangalter, Guy-Manuel De Homem-Christo
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French house music duo Daft Punk has produced music for
the Stardust project, for the film Irréversible and they wrote the
screenplay of Kazuhisa Takenôchi Interstella 5555 (2003).
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Alexandre O. Philippe
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After several years of intermittent work and starvation as a
screenwriter, Alexandre O. Philippe turned to directing his first film,
Chick Flick (The Miracle Mike Story). Earthlings is his second Picture
Show, and his third is currently in pre-production.
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Anders Banke
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After five years of studies at the State Institute of Cinematography
in Moscow, in 1996 he leaves the VGIK and starts directing shorts,
Music promos, TV commercials and documentaries. Frostbiten is his
first feature film.
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Lamberto Bava
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Born in 1944, he is the last in a family of Italian filmmakers.
Lamberto entered cinema as his father’s personal assistant and made
his solo directorial debut with Macabro (1980). scienceplusfiction
awarded him with the Silver Urania in 2005.
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David Moreau, Xavier Palud
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A duo of French filmmakers who joined forces to direct Ils, a
movie whose success has been their passport to Hollywood to
direct the American remake of The Eye also as a team, starring
Jessica Alba and Tom Cruise.
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Jim Finn
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Jim Finn (1968, St. Louis) is an artist whose film and video work
has screened at festivals such as Rotterdam, Ann Arbor and NY
Underground. His needlepoint pillow series, Communist Heroes of
South America, was featured in Knitknit magazine.
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Guillermo Del Toro
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Guillermo Del Toro was born in 1964 in Guadalajara Jalisco,
Mexico. Raised by his Catholic grandmother, Del Toro developed an
interest in filmmaking in his early teens. Del Toro got his first big
break with Cronos (1992).
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Peter Khazizov
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In 1992 he founded Cinemateka, his production/postproduction
company. He directed more than a hundred commercials. Cinemateka
has provided post-production services and produced special effects
for a number of Russian films. Manga is his first feature film.
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Bernard Werber
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Werber’s Les fourmis made him one of France’s most popular
sci-fi novelists in the 90s. His books include L’Empire des Anges
(2000) and L’Arbre des Possibles (2002). First feature after the
short film Nos Amis les Humains.
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Christian Volckman
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After studying in the USA and having completed his education at
the École Supérieure d’Arts Graphiques, Christian Volckman made
his debut with the short film Maaz in 1995: a big success that won
more than 30 awards. Renaissance is his first full feature film.
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Robin Aubert
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He began his movie career as an actor with movies as La
Comtesse de Bâton Rouge, Sunk and Le Nèg. In 1999, Aubert
started directing with the short film Maudit Criss and Suzie and
producing music video clips. This is his first full feature.
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Kim Chapiron
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Born on the 4th of july 1980, in 1995 Chapiron founded the
Kourtrajmé Production. This cercle rapidly enlarges and rappers and
artists such as Oxmo Puccino, Vincent Cassel and Mathieu Kassovitz
join in.
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Philip Chidel
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San Francisco-based filmmaker Chidel has worked in feature
films, reality-based TV, multimedia, interactive TV. Prior production
credits include Copycat, The Man Who Knew Too Little, Mr. Jones,
Tales From the Dark Side: The Movie, and The Exorcist III.
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Sean S. Cunningham, Joe Dante, John Gaeta, Monte Hellman, Ken Russell
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Some of these artists’ masterworks are: Sean S. Cunningham (Friday the 13th, 1980, DeepStar
Six, 1989), Joe Dante (Piranha, 1978, Gremlins, 1984, Small Soldiers, 1998), John Gaeta (visual
effects for The Matrix, 1999-2003), Monte Hellman (Two-Lane Blacktop, 1971, tv serial Baretta,
1975), Ken Russell (Tommy, 1975, Altered States, 1980)
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Torico
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Torico made her directional debut in 2004 with a short film
Migakagami which was highly acclaimed by three major film
festivals in Japan. Wicked Flowers is Torico’s first feature film that
has been released in the theater.
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Elie Duponchel, Hadrien Genest
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Till Nowak
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Till Nowak was born 1980 in Bonn, Germany. In 2000 he
finished school and founded the media agency "frameboX"
in Mainz, Germany. At the same time he studied "media design" until his diploma in 2005.
Between 2001 and 2005 Till Nowak received the debitel media
design award, 1st prizes at AFI Fest Los Angeles, OFFF Festival
Barcelona, Prix UIP Ghent and some others.
Filmography (excerpt):
"Delivery", 2005 (Director)
"Göring - Eine Karriere", 2006 (Design, Title animation)
"Mr. Cool ICE - Ein Portrait", 2005 (Director)
"Telesync", 2003 (Director)
"Epiphania", 2005 (Visual Effects)
"Hitlers Kinder", 2000 (Title animation)
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István Madarász
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Albert Arizza
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Petra Schröder
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Brendan Muldowney
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Aurélien Poitrimoult
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Elio Quiroga
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Ulfe Groote
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Martin Turk
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Fabio Guaglione, Fabio Resinaro
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Simon Bovey
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Raphael Wahl
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Calogero Alaimo
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Vincenzo Pandolfi
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Giuseppe Tandoi
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Alessandro de Cristoforo
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Alessandro Villamira
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Silvana Zancolò
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Alex G. Raccuglia
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Jean-Luc Godard
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