Saxon Logan | |
---|---|
Born | Hale, United Kingdom |
Citizenship | British |
Occupation | Director |
Saxon Logan FRGS (born 8 September 1956) is a British born South African based film director, writer and producer. [1] Logan is known for his singular documentary and narrative filmmaking and was the winner of an Emmy award for his work on The Lake That Made a Dent. [2] A Nichiren Buddhist for 4 decades.
Saxon grew up in Rhodesia. For reasons he cannot explain he knew he wanted to make films from an early age. He was expelled from his High School Hamilton, having been caught reading Playboy magazines. At the age of 18 he was required to join the Rhodesian Army under conscription laws, however, due to identifying as an objector, he faced detention. His mother assisted him in escaping the Rhodesian authorities and his return to Britain. [3] He could not study filmmaking as there were no film schools affordable at that time. After working odd jobs he contacted Lindsay Anderson as he was so struck by Anderson's If..... Lindsay Anderson recognised Logan as a vocationally iconoclastic artist. And thus formed a mentor pupil relationship. Logan served an apprenticeship with director Lindsay Anderson at the Theatre Upstairs at the Royal Court. [4] At nineteen years of age he directed his first play Doctor Galley with Henry Woolf at the Traverse Theatre at the Edinburgh Festival. This transferred to the Soho Poly in the West End. Lindsay Anderson financed Logan's first short film, which was acquired by the British Film Institute and supported Polanski's The Tenant in Cinemas. His short film gave Anderson a return of GBP 11 profit on his investment. Lindsay Anderson was Best Man at Saxon Logan's wedding.
During his apprenticeship with Lindsay Anderson he worked in various departments including locations research, props department, and assistant editor. Following this apprenticeship, Lindsay Anderson made him his personal assistant on O Lucky Man!. They formed a deep friendship. "You are the lucky man", Lindsay exclaimed. Logan joined BBC TV where he worked as a producer on BBC Art's stand Omnibus amongst others. [5] He made a documentary on Sir Dirk Bogarde ( according to Bogarde, his friend Charlotte Rampling said "his was a fine performance from an obviously great director").and Sculpture, Raymond Mason as well as his acclaimed Working Surface, starring Joanna David and Bill Douglas. Subsequent to his departure from BBC he worked as an independent producer/director and created work for Channel 4 and ITV. [6]
His documentaries have often centred around environmental and societal issues. [7] Place of The Skulls focussed on the plight of Ivory trade, and led to a ban on the ivory trade, which earned him an Academy Award. Black Rhino: the last stand, which focused on the dwindling number of black Rhinos in Africa saw him win the IDFA Gold Medal, African Hunter focused on big game hunting and was screened by National Geographic to great acclaim. As a result of his documentary work he was made an Honorary Fellow of The Royal Geographical Society. [8]
In addition to documentary filmmaking he has directed several feature/narrative films. He made the super cult film Sleepwalker with Bill Douglas, Nick Grace and Joanna David. It was held over for numerous screenings at The Berlin Film Festival. As a vocational film maker Logan only makes films that he takes a personal interest in. On viewing Sleepwalker, Jean Luc Godard is known to have said: "at least there is one committed filmmaker in Britain". Logan identifies as a Scottish filmmaker, in the tradition of Alexander MacKenzie, Robert Hamer, Bill Douglas, Lynne Ramsay and Lindsay Anderson.
Logan is known for his documentary filmmaking and was the winner of an Emmy award for his work on The Lake That Made a Dent [2] and was made an Honorary Fellow of The Royal Geographical Society. He also received an honorary mention from the American Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences for his work on Place of Skulls. He received an award at the Berlin Film Festival for his feature film Sleepwalker. [9] He is currently working on a streamer drama film series of Doctor David Livingstone's failed Zambezi Expedition, Produced by Lucas Foster.
Year | Title | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1977 | Stepping Out | Short | ||
1982 | Omnibus | Documentary | ||
1984 | Sleepwalker | Also writer | ||
1986 | African Hunter | Documentary | ||
1987 | Black Rhino | Documentary | ||
1989 | A Place of Skulls | Honorary Mention | ||
1989 | The Lake That Made A Dent [10] | Emmy Award | ||
1991 | Fragile Earth | Documentary | ||
2016 | Sylvia - Tracing Blood [11] | Also writer |
Lindsay Gordon Anderson was a British feature-film, theatre and documentary director, film critic, and leading-light of the Free Cinema movement and of the British New Wave. He is most widely remembered for his 1968 film if...., which won the Palme d'Or at Cannes Film Festival in 1969 and marked Malcolm McDowell's cinematic debut. He is also notable, though not a professional actor, for playing a minor role in the Academy Award-winning 1981 film Chariots of Fire. McDowell produced a 2007 documentary about his experiences with Anderson, Never Apologize.
The Wicker Man is a 1973 British folk horror film directed by Robin Hardy and starring Edward Woodward, Britt Ekland, Diane Cilento, Ingrid Pitt and Christopher Lee. The screenplay is by Anthony Shaffer, inspired by David Pinner's 1967 novel Ritual, and Paul Giovanni composed the film score.
Sir Dirk Bogarde was an English actor, novelist and screenwriter. Initially a matinée idol in films such as Doctor in the House (1954) for the Rank Organisation, he later acted in art house films, evolving from "heartthrob to icon of edginess".
This Sporting Life is a 1963 British kitchen sink drama film directed by Lindsay Anderson. Based on the 1960 novel of the same name by David Storey, which won the 1960 Macmillan Fiction Award, it recounts the story of a rugby league footballer in Wakefield, a mining city in Yorkshire, whose romantic life is not as successful as his sporting life. Storey, a former professional rugby league footballer, also wrote the screenplay.
Malcolm McDowell is an English actor. He first became known for portraying Mick Travis in Lindsay Anderson's if.... (1968), a role he later reprised in O Lucky Man! (1973) and Britannia Hospital (1982). His performance in if.... prompted Stanley Kubrick to cast him as Alex in A Clockwork Orange (1971), the role for which McDowell became best known.
Timothy Asch was an American anthropologist, photographer, and ethnographic filmmaker. Along with John Marshall and Robert Gardner, Asch played an important role in the development of visual anthropology. He is particularly known for his film The Ax Fight and his role with the USC Center for Visual Anthropology.
Sean Sexton Cunningham is an American film director, producer, and writer. He is best known for directing and producing several horror films, beginning in the early 1970s.
Liliana Cavani is an Italian film director and screenwriter. Cavani became internationally known after the success of her 1974 feature film Il portiere di notte. Her films have historical concerns. In addition to feature films and documentaries, she has also directed opera.
Every Day Except Christmas is a 37-minute documentary film filmed in 1957 at the Covent Garden fruit, vegetable and flower market, which at that point was still located in central London. It was directed by Lindsay Anderson and produced by Karel Reisz and Leon Clore under the sponsorship of Ford of Britain, the first of the company's "Look at Britain" series. It was filmed by Walter Lassally.
Miroslav Ondříček was a Czech cinematographer who worked on over 40 films, including Amadeus, Ragtime and If.....
Peter Taylor was an English film editor with more than 30 film credits. Perhaps his best remembered contribution is the editing of the 1957 film The Bridge on the River Kwai.
François Miron is a French-Canadian experimental filmmaker also working in documentary and fiction.
Ian Dalrymple was a British screenwriter, film director, film editor and film producer.
Michael Kenneth Christian Grigsby was an English documentary filmmaker.
Gavrik Losey is an American-born participant in various aspects of filmmaking including producer and production manager. Gavrik was born in New York, the son of film director Joseph Losey and fashion designer Elizabeth Hawes. He attended the Little Red School House in Manhattan, Poughkeepsie Day School in Poughkeepsie, and high school in New Jersey. After graduating, he travelled with his blacklisted father to England where he attended University College London.
Doctor at Large is a 1957 British comedy film directed by Ralph Thomas starring Dirk Bogarde, Muriel Pavlow, Donald Sinden, James Robertson Justice and Shirley Eaton. It is the third of the seven films in the Doctor series, and is based on the 1955 novel of the same title by Richard Gordon.
Warwick Thornton is an Australian film director, screenwriter, and cinematographer. His debut feature film Samson and Delilah won the Caméra d'Or at the 2009 Cannes Film Festival and the award for Best Film at the Asia Pacific Screen Awards. He also won the Asia Pacific Screen Award for Best Film in 2017 for Sweet Country.
James Sanders is an American architect, author, and filmmaker in New York City, whose work has garnered him a Guggenheim Fellowship, an Emmy Award, and elevation to the College of Fellows of the American Institute of Architects, among other honors.
Philip Bloom is a British filmmaker known for his DSLR filmmaking, blog, YouTube channel and education. He has worked as a cinematographer and cameraman for Lucasfilm, CNN, Sky News and the BBC.
Ozzy Inguanzo is a Cuban-American screenwriter, producer, and published author. His feature screenplay Our Man in Miami made the 2023 Black List. In 2019, he received the Writers Guild of America Award for Best Documentary Screenplay.