|
JOHN
FELDMAN
Filmmaker
John Feldman is a highly original and critically acclaimed
filmmaker. His works cover a wide range of genres, including feature and
experimental films, documentaries, and corporate videos. (Go to resume/filmography)
Since making his first film in 1968, Mr. Feldman has carefully cultivated
his skills as a writer, cinematographer, director, and editor. A meticulous
craftsman, Feldman is intimately involved in every stage of film production.
Recently, Mr. Feldman has become a leading proponent of the aesthetic
potential of digital filmmaking. His vision is to use digital technology
to develop a technique of "writing with pictures and sounds."
|
"John Feldman possesses in abundance
what most contemporary filmmakers lack -- the ability to create
three dimensional characters, a deft hand with actors and an understanding
of how to use the physical environment to express complex emotions."
Joel Siegel, Washington,
D.C. City Paper.
|
"Who the Hell is Bobby
Roos?" is Mr. Feldman's third feature film. His first feature film,
"Alligator Eyes,"
was released theatrically in 1990 and won a first prize at the San Sebastian
International Film Festival. Screen International called it "a truly clever,
funny and entertaining film," while The London Observer said: "Feldman's
handsome, intelligent movie is eloquently scripted." Variety praised it
as "unusually well written, directed and acted."
His second feature film,
"Dead
Funny," starring Elizabeth Pena and Andrew McCarthy, was released
theatrically in the United States in the summer of 1995 to critical and
audience applause:
|
"...funny and elaborate, full
of ironic twists, red herrings and dark alleyways of the mind,
"Dead Funny" neither bows to convention nor throws up
implausabilities,
but is instead finely crafted and highly original. Energetic and
surprising at every turn, "Dead Funny" is seriously entertaining."
Woodstock
Times, New York
|
Variety proclaimed it "top notch," and WBAI (NY) called
it "a steamy potion of lethal and erotic dark comedy." New York Newsday
said: "The film is unobtrusively stylish and Feldman is sure handed about
keeping the camera and characters moving with purpose."
Mr. Feldman is also highly regarded as a writer and director
of educational and corporate videos. From basic chemistry to American
politics, from high finance to business ethics, Mr. Feldman has gained
a reputation for his ability to explain complex material to a lay audience
in an entertaining and visual way. He has written scripts and directed
videos for Channel 4 Television in the U.K, AOL-Time Warner, Eastman Kodak,
Viacom, Citibank, Vivendi Universal and many other global corporations.
In addition, he has created video portraits of autistic children for the
Son-Rise Program; dramatic educational stories about avoiding errors in
the workplace for Marsh and McLennan; and other educational and experimental
videos.
In 1997, Mr. Feldman guided his production company, Hummingbird
Films LLC, into the realm of all-digital filmmaking with a mission to
explore and develop the unique creative potential of the new generation
of digital production technology. "Who
the Hell is Bobby Roos?" is the result of that process.
Born
in Baltimore in 1954, John Feldman's early short films, including
"Dry Yearnings" (1979), "The Elevator Room" (1980), and "Circus
of Hostages" (1982), earned him numerous international film
festival awards, as well as a student Academy Award and a CINE
Eagle. Mr. Feldman has taught film production in London and
U.S. Universities. He has a BA in biology from the University
of Chicago and an MFA from Temple University. Based in New York,
John Feldman is married to Sheila Silver, a composer of contemporary
concert music. They are currently collaborating on a film of
Ms. Silver's opera "The Thief of Love," and a series of short
contemporary music and video compositions, MusicVisions, which
are made for live concert presentation and DVD release.
See John Feldman's complete resume/filmography.
|
|