Warren Miller (director)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Warren Miller (born October 15, 1924) is an acclaimed filmmaker of ski & snowboarding movies. His credits include over 750 sports films, several books and hundreds of published non-fiction stories. His annual films on skiing and other outdoor sports are renowned for their stunning photography, witty humor, and exhibition of incredible talent showcasing Olympians and celebrity athletes. He has received wide acclaim for his promotion of the sport of modern skiing through his films spanning over 50 years.
Contents |
[edit] Early years
Warren Miller was born in Hollywood, and as a young man he took up the hobbies of skiing, surfing, and photography. At the age of 18, with the U.S. ten months into World War II, he enlisted in the U.S. Navy and served in the South Pacific.[1] Upon his discharge from the Navy in 1946 he bought his first 8mm movie camera. He and a friend moved to Sun Valley, Idaho where they camped in the parking lot of the Sun Valley ski resort, living out of a teardrop trailer and earning money as ski instructors. In their free time, they would film each other skiing to critique and improve their ski techniques. During the summers they shifted their lifestyle to the California coast where they filmed each other surfing.[2]
[edit] The birth of Warren Miller Entertainment
Warren Miller would often show his skiing and surfing films to friends, making jokes about their exploits throughout the showing of the film. When he began to receive invitations to show and narrate his films at parties, it occurred to him that he could turn this hobby into a business. In 1949, Miller founded Warren Miller Entertainment and began a long standing tradition of producing one feature-length ski film per year. He rented out halls and theaters, usually with borrowed money, and charged admission to his shows. He booked show halls near ski resorts so that he could film the next year's footage during the day, and show the current film in the evening. Before long he was showing his films in 130 cities a year.[3]
[edit] Warren Miller Entertainment today
Miller continued to head the company both creatively and executively until the late 1980s when he sold the company to his son, Kurt Miller. Kurt later sold the company to Time, Inc., and the company still produces a new film every year, which is then taken on a screening tour near the end of the Northern autumn and again 6 months later for the Southern Hemisphere. The screenings of the annual films are elaborate events designed as celebrations of the beginning of each skiing season.
While phasing out of his executive role, Miller still maintained his creative role as director and narrator for the films into the 1990s, but due to his age (now over 80 years old) and ailing health, Miller has distanced himself from production in recent years. The makers of recent films such as, Warren Miller's Higher Ground (2005) and Warren Miller's Off the Grid (2006), opted to use Miller's narration from previous films rather than recording new narration.[4][5][6]
Recent films have been criticized as a departure from the traditional Warren Miller films.[citation needed] Miller himself has indicated that he is not content with recent productions.[citation needed] Still, the films get mostly positive reviews and continue to garner a loyal fanbase of both skiers and snowboarders.
Warren Miller currently resides with his wife, Laurie, in Seattle, Washington, and is officially retired from filmmaking but remains an active writer. He has announced plans to publish a book about life in retirement called, "What Are You Doing with the Rest of Your Life?"
[edit] Well known quotes
This section does not cite any references or sources. (September 2007) Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. |
Warren Miller's movies are known for his wry narration and one-liners. Some of his one-liners are simply jokes, while others are profound life-statements. Many of his best lines have been used in several films, and a few have been used in nearly every film. The following is a list of some of his better-known quotes.
- If you don't do it this year, you'll be one year older when you do.
- Don't take life seriously because you can't come out of it alive.
- Adventure is the invitation to common people to become uncommon.
- You want your skis? Go get 'em.
- On the other hand, you have different fingers.
- If you saw your dog doing this, you'd take him to the vet and have him fixed.
- If your parents didn't have children, odds are you won't either.
- If you come to a fork in the road, take it.
- If you can afford to go to college, then you don't need to.
- If at first you don't succeed - don't try skydiving.
- Definition of Extreme is to go past your known limits by an unknown amount.
- You can't get hurt skiing; unless you fall.
- Today is more like today than it ever has been before.
- The absolute speed of life is 1 second per second.
- An avalanche has only one job: To kill you
- It's not your aptitude but your attitude which will determine your altitude.
- See you next year, same time, same place. Thank you, and goodnight. (Warren Miller's signature sign-off at the end of a film)
[edit] List of ski films
# | Year | Title |
---|---|---|
1 | 1950 | Deep And Light |
2 | 1951 | California Skis |
3 | 1952 | Wandering Skis |
4 | 1953 | Ski Fantasy |
5 | 1954 | Symphony On Skis |
6 | 1955 | Invitation To Skiing |
7 | 1956 | Have Skis, Will Travel |
8 | 1957 | Anyone For Skiing? |
9 | 1958 | Are Your Skis On Straight? |
10 | 1959 | Let's Go Skiing |
11 | 1960 | Swinging Skis |
12 | 1961 | Many Moods Of Skiing |
13 | 1962 | Around The World On Skis |
14 | 1963 | The Sound Of Skiing |
15 | 1964 | The Skiers |
16 | 1965 | The Big Ski Show |
17 | 1966 | Ski On The Wild Side |
18 | 1967 | The Ski Scene |
19 | 1968 | (unknown) |
20 | 1969 | This Is Skiing |
21 | 1970 | Sound Of Winter |
22 | 1971 | Any Snow, Any Mountain |
23 | 1972 | Winter People |
24 | 1973 | Skiing's Great |
25 | 1974 | The Color Of Skiing |
26 | 1975 | There Comes A Time |
27 | 1976 | Skiing On My Mind |
28 | 1977 | In Search Of Skiing |
29 | 1978 | Ski A La Carte |
30 | 1979 | Winter Fever |
31 | 1980 | Ski People |
32 | 1981 | Ski In The Sun |
33 | 1982 | Snowonder |
34 | 1983 | Ski Time |
35 | 1984 | Ski Country |
36 | 1985 | Steep And Deep |
37 | 1986 | Beyond The Edge |
38 | 1987 | White Winter Heat |
39 | 1988 | Escape To Ski |
40 | 1989 | White Magic |
41 | 1990 | Extreme Winter |
42 | 1991 | Born To Ski |
43 | 1992 | Steeper And Deeper |
44 | 1993 | Black Diamond Rush |
45 | 1994 | Vertical Reality |
46 | 1995 | Endless Winter |
47 | 1996 | Snowriders |
48 | 1997 | Snowriders 2 |
49 | 1998 | Freeriders |
50 | 1999 | Fifty |
51 | 2000 | Ride |
52 | 2001 | Cold Fusion |
53 | 2002 | Storm |
54 | 2003 | Journey |
55 | 2004 | Impact |
56 | 2005 | Higher Ground |
57 | 2006 | Off The Grid |
58 | 2007 | Playground |
[edit] Books by Warren Miller
- Wine, Women, Warren & Skis
- Lurching from One Near Disaster to the Next
- On Film in Print
[edit] Notes
- ^ Warren Miller by Mort Lund (2005). [1]
- ^ Miller, Warren (2005). [2]
- ^ Miller, Warren (2005). [3]
- ^ Miller, Warren (2005). "My Bio: Warren on Warren" (Commercial site), warrenmiller.net. Retrieved on 2007-08-19.
- ^ "Warren Miller’s Off the Grid: The world’s largest winter sports movie announces 2006 U.S. tour." (Press release, commercial website). Skinet.net. Retrieved on 2007-08-19.
- ^ "Warren Miller's Higher Ground." (Press release), PR Newswire, 2005-08-31, via highbeam.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-19.