Tom Cowan (director)
Tom Cowan | |
---|---|
Born |
Victoria, Australia | 31 October 1942
Occupation | Film director |
Years active | 1964-present |
Tom Cowan (born 31 October 1942) is an Australian filmmaker.
Career
He started as a trainee at the Australian Broadcasting Commission and the joined the Commonwealth Film Unit. He left it in 1968 to work as a freelance cameraman and moved into feature films.[1][2] His 1972 film The Office Picnic was entered into the 8th Moscow International Film Festival.[3]
Select filmography
- The Dancing Girls (1964) - documentary - DOP
- Helena in Sydney (1967) - documentary - short
- This Year Jerusalem (1969) - documentary - DOP, director
- Samskara (1969) - DOP
- Trouble in Molopolis (1970) - DOP
- Mogador (1970) - DOP (film appears to never have screened publicly)
- Australia Felix (1970) - short - director
- Story of a House (1970) - educational short
- Down Under (1971) - DOP
- Bonjour Balwyn (1971) - DOP
- The Office Picnic (1972) - director, writer, producer
- Promised Woman (1975) - director, writer, DOP
- Wild Wind (1975) - director
- Pure S (1975) - DOP
- The Love Letters from Teralba Road (1977) - DOP
- Journey Among Women (1977) - director
- Third Person Plural (1978) - DOP
- Mouth to Mouth (1978)
- Dimboola (1979) - DOP
- Sweet Dreamers (1981) - director
- Winter of Our Dreams (1981) - DOP
- Dead Easy (1982) - DOP
- One Night Stand (1984) - DOP
- Emma's War (1986) - DOP
- Antarctica (1991) (documentary) - DOP
- Backsliding (1992) - DOP
- Africa's Elephant Kingdom (1998) (documentary) - DOP
- Orange Love Story (2004) - director
Unmade films
- Roche (1974) - proposed follow up to Promised Woman[4]
References
- ↑ Andrew Pike and Ross Cooper, Australian Film 1900–1977: A Guide to Feature Film Production, Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 1998 p266
- ↑ David Stratton, The Last New Wave: The Australian Film Revival, Angus & Robertson, 1980 p181-183
- ↑ "8th Moscow International Film Festival (1973)". MIFF. Retrieved 2013-01-03.
- ↑ Graham Shirley, "Promised Woman", Cinema Papers, July 1974 p204-206
External links
- Tom Cowan on IMDb
- Tom Cowan at Melbourne Independent Filmmakers
- Reema Moudgil, 'Tom Cowan: Moment Of Truth', Unboxed Writers, July 28, 2011
- Tom Cowan's blog
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