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Wednesday, July 18, 2018

Shooting People » Film of the Month: Mark Cousins
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Mark Cousins (born 3 May 1965) is a director and occasional presenter/critic on film. A prolific producer and director, he is best known for his 15-hour 2011 documentary The Story of Film: An Odyssey. He presently lives in Edinburgh, Scotland.


Video Mark Cousins (film critic)



Career

Cousins interviewed famous filmmakers such as David Lynch, Martin Scorsese and Roman Polanski in the TV series Scene by Scene. He presented the BBC cult film series Moviedrome from June 1997 to July 2000. He introduced 66 films for the show, including the little-seen Nicolas Roeg film Eureka.

In 2009, Cousins and actress/director Tilda Swinton created a project where they mounted a 33.5-tonne portable cinema on a large truck which was physically pulled through the Scottish Highlands. The traveling independent film festival was featured prominently in a documentary called Cinema is Everywhere. The festival was repeated in 2011.

His 2011 film The Story of Film: An Odyssey was broadcast as 15 one-hour television episodes on More4, and later, featured at the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival. In September 2013, it began to be shown on Turner Classic Movies. Drawing on its exhaustive film library, TCM complemented each episode with relevant short films and feature films ranging from the familiar to the rarely seen. TCM received a 2013 Peabody Award "for its inclusive, uniquely annotated survey of world cinema history".

AfterThe Story of Film, Cousins's next project was intentionally a small-scale work: What Is This Film Called Love? is a self-photographed diary of his three-day walk around Mexico City, accompanied by his imagined conversation with a photo of Sergei Eisenstein and reviewed as "fatuous" by Variety Another low-budget, quickly produced documentary, Here Be Dragons, covers a short film-watching trip he made to Albania and was also poorly received as indulgent and "random". 6 Desires: DH Lawrence and Sardinia is structured around an imagined letter from Cousins to the author D. H. Lawrence, who wrote about a 1921 visit to Sardinia. Life May Be was a collaboration with Iranian director and actor Mania Akbari, again making use of Cousins's familiar structural devices of letters, travel imagery, and voiceover commentary, judged "self-advertisement".

A Story of Children and Film was better received. Its origins lay in some footage he shot of his niece and nephew at play, and grew into a documentary about the representation of children in cinema.

Cousins subsequently produced I Am Belfast, in which the city is personified by a 10,000-year-old woman. Portions of the film in progress, with a score by Belfast composer David Holmes were screened at the 2014 Belfast Film Festival. He is also working on a three-hour addendum to The Story of Film, on the subject of documentaries, entitled Dear John Grierson.


Maps Mark Cousins (film critic)



Personal life

Born in Coventry, West Midlands, in the United Kingdom, he attended St Louis Grammar School, Ballymena. He is a graduate of the University of Stirling in Scotland, where he studied film, media, and art. Since 1984 he has been in a longterm personal relationship with Gill Moreton, a psychologist, whom he met at Stirling; they live in Edinburgh.


Life May Be': Edinburgh Review | Hollywood Reporter
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Filmography

  • The First Movie (director, 2009)
  • The Story of Film: An Odyssey (director and presenter, 2011)
  • What Is This Film Called... Love? (director, 2012)
  • A Story of Children and Film (director, writer, 2013)
  • Here Be Dragons (director, writer, 2013)
  • 6 Desires: DH Lawrence and Sardinia (director, writer, 2014)
  • Life May Be (co-director, co-writer with Mania Akbari, 2014)
  • Atomic, Living in Dread and Promise (director, 2015)
  • I Am Belfast (director, writer, 2015)
  • Stockholm, My Love (director, co-writer with Anita Oxburgh, 2016)

I Am Belfast review: Mark Cousins paints a vital, intimate ...
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References


Stockholm My Love': Film Review | London Film Festival 2016 - http ...
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External links

  • Mark Cousins on IMDb
  • Articles by Mark Cousins for Prospect magazine (registration required)

Source of article : Wikipedia