Aaron Kopp

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Aaron Kopp is a US-based cinematographer and film director who grew up in Swaziland.

Life[]

Kopp shot and co-produced Saving Face (2012), the Oscar-winning documentary about acid attacks in Pakistan. He and his partner Amanda Kopp shot for The Hunting Ground (2015), about sexual assault on American college campuses.[1]

Aaron and Amanda Kopp's 2017 movie Liyana, eight years in the making,[2] is a mix of documentary and animated fable. A 'story within a story', about a young girl rescuing her twin brothers from kidnappers, emerges from a storytelling workshop in Likhaya Lemphilo Lensha (New Life Homes) orphanage in Kamfishane, Shiselweni Region. Liyana is executive-produced by Thandiwe Newton, who heard about the project through filmmaker Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy.[3]

Filmography[]

As director[]

As cinematographer[]

  • Her Life is My Teacher, 2008
  • Begin, 2009
  • Del:100, 2010
  • Arise, 2012
  • Living on the Edge of Disaster: Climate's Human Cost, 2014
  • The Hunting Ground, 2015
  • Dime Short, 2017
  • Turns in the Road, 2018

As cinematographer and producer[]

References[]

  1. ^ Aaron Kopp & Amanda Kopp, Rocky Mountain Women's Film Institute.
  2. ^ Jazz Tangcay, LA Film Festival: Amanda Kopp and Aaron Kopp Discuss the Beautiful Liyana, Awards Daily, June 25, 2017.
  3. ^ Marlow Stern, Thandie Newton on the 'Tragedy' of Trump and Her 'F*cking Awful' Time Exposing Hollywood Abuse, Daily Beast, 11 October 2018.

External links[]


Retrieved from ""