Fred Kelemen
Fred Kelemen | |
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Born | 1964 |
Fred Kelemen (born 1964, Berlin) is a European film and theater director, cinematographer and writer.[1]
The late Susan Sontag helped to promote Kelemen's work in the mid-1990s, comparing it to the likes of Alexander Sokurov, Béla Tarr and Sharunas Bartas.[2]
Fred Kelemen studied painting, music, philosophy, science of religions and theater before attending the German Film & TV Academy in Berlin from 1989 to 1994. His debut film Fate in 1994 received the German National Film Award. He has also directed Frost (1997/98), Nightfall (1999) and Fallen (2005), each drawing international attention and numerous awards.
Kelemen has served as cinematographer for film directors including Béla Tarr (, 1995, The Man from London, 2007, The Turin Horse, 2011), Rudolf Thome (The Visible and the Invisible, 2006), Gariné Torossian (Stone, Time, Touch, 2005), ( /Sweets], 2012/2013), Pavel Lungin (Esau, 2018) and others.
Since 2000 he has also directed several plays, including an adaptation of Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 at the Schauspielhaus in Hanover, and Eugene O'Neill's Desire Under The Elms at Volksbühne in Berlin. In addition, Kelemen has worked as a teacher at film and media institutes and universities at several locations.
With his production company Kino Kombat Filmmanufactur, Kelemen produced his film Krisana/Fallen (co-producer: Laima Freimane/Screen Vision, Latvia, 2005) and he produced or co-produced the films Moskatchka by Annett Schütze (co-producer: Laima Freimane/Screen Vision, Latvia, 2005), "Girlfriends" by Jana Marsik (co-producers: Laima Freimane/Screen Vision, Latvia, jana Marsik) and Fragment by Gyula Maár (producer: Béla Tarr/TTFilmműhely, Hungary, 2007).
Filmography[]
Director
- 1993 –
- 1994 – (Verhängnis)
- 1997/1998 –
- 1999 –
- 2005 –
- 2016 –
Cinematographer
- 1993 –
- 1994 – (Verhängnis)
- 1995 – (short)
- 1997/1998 –
- 1999 –
- 2000 – (documentary)
- 2007 – (documentary)
- 2007 – The Man from London
- 2007 –
- 2011 – The Turin Horse
- 2013 –
- 2016 – /
- 2018 - Esau
Awards[]
- 1994 – FIPRESCI-Award for "Fate" (original title: "Verhängnis")'
- 1995 – German National Film Award (Silver Ribbon) for "Fate" (original title: "Verhängnis")
- 1998 – FIPRESCI- Award for "Frost"
- 1999 – FIPRESCI- Award for "Nightfall" (original title: "Abendland")
- 2005 – FIPRESCI- Award for "Fallen" (original title: "Kisana")
- 2005 – Latvian National Film Award "Best Cinematographer" for "Fallen" (original title: "Krisana")
- 2005 – German Camera Award - Nomination
- 2011 – Golden Camera 300 - International Cinematographers' Film Festival Manaki Brothers / Macedonia for "The Turin Horse"
- 2011 – Carlo Di Palma Best European Cinematographer Award - Nomination
- 2012 – Hungarian National Film Award - Best Cinematographer
- 2013 – Innovation Award of the German Film Critics' Association
- 2016 – Special Prize MASTER, Yerevan International Film Festival "Golden Apricot"
- 2016 – St. Grigor Narekatsi Gold Medal of the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Armenia, Yerevan/Armenia
References[]
- ^ http://www.fredkelemen.com/html/bio/bio_filmographie_eng.html
- ^ Susan Sontag, "The Decay of Cinema," The New York Times, February 25, 1996.
External links[]
- Koehler, Robert. "Interview | The Thinking Image: Fred Kelemen on Béla Tarr and The Turin Horse." Cinema Scope 46, accessed June 3, 2017.
- Fred Kelemen.com
- Karlovy Vary International Film Festival
- Official website
- Fred Kelemen at IMDb
- 1964 births
- Film people from Berlin
- Living people
- Hungarian cinematographers