Mark_Cousins_(filmmaker)

Mark Cousins (filmmaker)

Mark Cousins (filmmaker)

Northern Irish film director (born 1965)


Mark Cousins (born 3 May 1965) is an English-born, Northern Irish director and writer. A prolific documentarian, among his works is the 15-hour 2011 documentary The Story of Film: An Odyssey.

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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.[1]

In the 1990s and 2000s, Cousins interviewed directors, producers and actors including Steven Spielberg, Woody Allen, Tom Hanks, Sean Connery, Brian De Palma, Steve Martin, Lauren Bacall, Jane Russell, Paul Schrader, Bernardo Bertolucci, Kirk Douglas, Jeanne Moreau, Terence Stamp, Jack Lemmon, Janet Leigh and Rod Steiger.

In 2009, Cousins and Tilda Swinton co-founded the "8/2 Foundation".[2] Together they also 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.[3][4]

Robert Osborne, Cousins and TCM senior vice president Charles Tabesh in 2014, with the Peabody Award that TCM received for its presentation of The Story of Film: An Odyssey

His 2011 film The Story of Film: An Odyssey[5][6] was broadcast on Channel 4 as 15 one-hour television episodes[7] on More4,[5] and later, featured at the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival.[8] In September 2013, it began to be shown on Turner Classic Movies (TCM).[9] 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".[10][11]

Following The Story of Film,was a shorter work: What Is This Film Called Love? a self-photographed diary of his three-day walk around Mexico City, accompanied by his imagined conversation with a photo of Sergei Eisenstein and described as "fatuous" by film bible Variety.[12] 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".[13]

6 Desires: DH Lawrence and Sardinia was based around an imagined letter from Cousins to the author D. H. Lawrence, who wrote about a 1921 visit to Sardinia.[14] Life May Be was a collaboration with Iranian director and actor Mania Akbari, again making use of Cousins' familiar structural devices of letters, travel imagery, and voiceover commentary, judged "self-advertisement".[15]

A Story of Children and Film was critically better-received. Using footage he shot of his niece and nephew at play as a springboard it muses on the representation of children in cinema.[16][17][18][19][20]

Cousins subsequently wrote and directed 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.[21] He is also working on a three-hour addendum to The Story of Film, on the subject of documentaries, entitled Dear John Grierson.[22]

Cousins took an axe to his own film Bigger Than The Shining after screening to a live audience at the 2017 International Rotterdam Film Festival (IFFR), with the intention of never screeining it again since this was the only copy of the film.[23]

Cousins is the Co-Artistic Director of Cinema China, The Ballerina Ballroom Cinema of Dreams and A Pilgrimage with Tilda Swinton. Together with Antonia Bird, Robert Carlyle and Irvine Welsh, Cousins is a director of the production company 4Way Pictures.[24] Between 2001 and 2011, he wrote for Prospect, and now writes for Sight & Sound and Filmkrant.

Cousins was appointed Honorary Professor of the University of Glasgow in 2013,[25] as well as Honorary Doctor of Letters at both the University of Edinburgh in 2007[26] and University of Stirling in 2014.[27] He is a Patron of the Edinburgh International Film Festival, and previously acted as both a programmer and director (1996–1997) of the festival.[28]

He also appeared on Mark Kermode's YouTube channel "Kermode Uncut".[29]

Cousins chairs the Belfast Film Festival, and is a board member of Michael Moore's Traverse City Film Festival[30] and was a Member of the Audentia Award jury at the 42nd Göteborg International Film Festival (GIFF) in 2019,[31] as well as member of the "Official Competition" jury at the 53rd Karlovy Vary International Film Festival in 2018.[32]

In 2019, Cousins was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.[33] In 2021, he was on the jury for that year's BFI London Film Festival.[34]

His film The Story of Film: A New Generation was first screened at the Cannes Film Festival 2021.[35]

Personal life

Born in Coventry, England,[36] Cousins was raised in Ballymena, County Antrim, Northern Ireland (where he attended St Louis Grammar School), and graduated in film, television and art at the University of Stirling.[21][37][38] Since 1984, he has been in a long-term personal relationship with Gill Moreton, a psychologist, whom he met at Stirling; they live in Edinburgh.[39][40]

In December 2023 he was one of 50 filmmakers who signed an open letter to Libération demanding a ceasefire and an end to the killing of civilians amid the 2023 Israeli invasion of the Gaza Strip, and for a humanitarian corridor into Gaza to be established for humanitarian aid, and the release of hostages.[41][42][43]

Filmography

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Bibliography

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Awards and nominations

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Festivals accolations

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References

  1. "Mark Cousins Years". Moviedromer.
  2. "Entertainment | Actress Swinton hauls cinema". BBC News. 4 August 2009. Retrieved 2 February 2012.
  3. Staff (2012). "The Story of Film: An Odyssey". Channel 4. Retrieved 5 February 2012.
  4. Scott, A. O. (31 January 2012). "Your Film of Films: A Sweeping History of an Art". The New York Times. Retrieved 31 January 2012.
  5. Staff (2012). "The Story of Film: An Odyssey – Episodes". Channel 4. Retrieved 5 February 2012.
  6. Cousins, Mark (2011). "The Story of Film: An Odyssey – Real To Reel". Toronto International Film Festival. Archived from the original on 8 February 2012. Retrieved 5 February 2012.
  7. "The Peabody Awards, The Story of Film: An Odyssey (TCM)". Grady College of Journalism and Mass Media, University of Georgia. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
  8. Guy Lodge, "Review: 'What Is This Film Called Love?'", Variety, 2 July 2012. ("Sprite-like Irish film critic, historian and documaker Mark Cousins has done many commendable things to honor the medium he loves so deeply – notably last year's The Story of Film" – but his fatuous vanity project "What Is This Film Called Love?" is not among them."
  9. Stephen Dalton, "Here Be Dragons: London Review", The Hollywood Reporter, 17 October 2013. ("Shot last year during a short working holiday in Albania, this free-associating documentary initially promises to illuminate a mysterious Balkan backwater rarely seen on screen. Instead, it reveals rather too much about its author, his brainy reading habits, his airline meals, and his random thoughts on culture and politics.")
  10. Peter Bradshaw, "Cannes 2013: A Story of Children and Film – review", The Guardian, 4 April 2013. ("... one of the most beguiling events at Cannes, appropriately presented in the Cannes Classics section. Mark Cousins' personal cine-essay about children on film is entirely distinctive, sometimes eccentric, always brilliant: a mosaic of clips, images and moments chosen with flair and grace, both from familiar sources and from the neglected riches of cinema around the world.")
  11. Tim Robey, "A Story of Children and Film, review: A vivid history of children in front of the camera", The Daily Telegraph, 3 April 2014. ("Something about Mark Cousins’ feyly magisterial presenting style fits the material like a glove in his new documentary – it may be the best thing he's ever done."
  12. Hardie, Kate (28 October 2013). "Antonia Bird obituary". The Guardian.
  13. "About the Festival". The Traverse City Film Festival.
  14. "Lucky One Winner of the Audentia Award". Göteborg Film Festival. 2 February 2019.
  15. "Dr Mark Cousins FRSE". The Royal Society of Edinburgh. 15 March 2019. Retrieved 15 March 2019.
  16. Rodger, James (8 September 2016). "Mogwai gear up for stunning Coventry Cathedral show". CoventryLive.
  17. Henry Hepburn, "Mark Cousins" Archived 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine, TESS, 21 September 2012.
  18. "Women Making Films: A New Road Movie Through Cinema". Official Site. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  19. Thompson, Anne (8 July 2021). "How Mark Cousins Connected Cinema, Again, in 'The Story of Film: A New Generation'". IndieWire. Retrieved 12 August 2021.
  20. "Outstanding Achievement Award | BAFTSS". www.baftss.org. Archived from the original on 22 September 2020.
  21. "The First Movie" via mubi.com.
  22. "Life May Be" via mubi.com.
  23. "Stockholm My Love" via mubi.com.
  24. "The Eyes of Orson Welles". Foyle Film Festival. 15 October 2018.
  25. "Storm in My Heart" via mubi.com.
  26. "40 Days To Learn Film" via mubi.com.
  27. "FFF | 34th Foyle Film Festival 2021". Nerve Centre. 21 October 2021.

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