James Scott
James SCOTT (1941, UK) is the son of British artist William Scott. He was given a box camera at the age of nine, which sparked his love for photography. He attended Slade School for Fine Arts to study Painting and Theatre Design. During his studies, he directed his celebrated first film, The Rocking Horse (1962). The short film A Shocking Accident (1982) was nominated for a BAFTA for Best Short Film and won an Oscar for Best Short Film, Live Action. In 1990, he released Strike It Rich, before taking a 12-year break from filmmaking. In 2017, he made the personal documentary Vanishing Point, which he filmed on his iPhone. The short documentary Fragments had its world premiere at IFFR 2020.
Filmography
The Rocking Horse (1962, short), In Separation (1965, short), Love’s Presentation (1967, short doc), R.B. Kitaj (1967, short doc), Richard Hamilton (1969, short doc), The Great Ice Cream Robbery (1971, short doc), England’s Historic Churches (1972, short doc), Adult Fun (1972), Nightcleaners (1974, doc, co-dir), Coilin and Platonida (1976), ’36 to ’77 (1978, co-dir), Chance, History, Art… (1980, short doc), A Shocking Accident (1982, short), Every Picture Tells a Story (1984, TV), Getting Even: A Wimp’s Revenge (1986, TV), Inspector Morse (1990, TV series, episode: The Last Enemy), Strike It Rich (1990), The Last of England (2002, short), Vanishing Point (2017, doc), Fragments (2020, short)
More info:
James Scott
Wikipedia, James Scott
James Scott at IFFR
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Adult Fun
Spy thriller in which a stockbroker spies on a company for a mysterious organisation. Godard, Hitchcock and Graham Greene combined.
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Fragments
A portrait of pop artist and filmmaker Derek Boshier (1937), while working on major new works, by legendary filmmaker/artist James Scott.
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The Tyger Burns
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