Jane Campion - In The Limelight
(Cinematographos. (2016, Sep 25). In The Limelight: Jane Campion. [Video File]. Retrieved from:https://youtu.be/C_igTDWt_AQ)
Jane Campion -Top of the Lake
(The Hollywood Reporter. (2013, Jan 19). Jane Campion's Top of the Lake' [Video File]. Retrieved from: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lMjNeD8Ec8k)
Conversations with Holly Hunter
(SAG-AFTRA Foundation. (2013, June 12). Conversations with Holly Hunter of Top of the Lake. Retrieved from: https://youtu.be/D-f78qJ_RTE)
Conversations with Elisabeth Moss
(SAG-AFTRA Foundation. (2013, October 31). Conversations with Elisabeth Moss of Top of the Lake. Retrieved fromhttps://youtu.be/h2m82NPOMOQ)
Jane Campion and Cannes
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Jane Campion was the first woman to win a Palme d'Or and only the second ever to be nominated for the best director Oscar. So it comes as a surprise that her latest gig, as president of the Cannes film festival jury, isn't another act of pioneering gender breakthrough.
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The Cannes Film Festival organizers must be pretty thrilled Jane Campion showed up to France this week. This is the fest’s big 70th anniversary year, which was marked with a giant celebration of the festival’s history — and also the glaring fact that Campion is the only woman filmmaker who has won the festival’s top prize in seven decades
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New Zealand director, producer and screenwriter Jane Campion is one of contemporary cinema’s most notable film-makers. She is the first and only female director to receive the coveted Palme d’or at Cannes
Director Jane Campion
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Jane Campion is an Academy Award-winning director and screenwriter known for films like The Piano and The Portrait of a Lady as well as television's Top of the Lake.
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Australian director and screenwriter Jane Campion (born 1954) created a number of films with strong female protagonists starting in the late 1980s. Among the best known of her works was the Academy-award-winning film The Piano (1993).
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Film-making is not about whether you’re a man or a woman; it’s about sensitivity and hard work and really loving what you do. But women are going to tell different stories – there would be many more stories in the world if women were making more films.
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Jane Campion was born in Wellington, New Zealand. She graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology from Wellington’s Victoria University, then pursued a Diploma of Fine Arts at Chelsea School of Arts in London before heading off to Sydney College of Arts, where she majored in painting.
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Jane Campion was born in Wellington, New Zealand, and now lives in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
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Publicising her new film Bright Star in Cannes earlier this year, Jane Campion grumbled about the "old boy network" of the Hollywood studios, lamented the lack of opportunities for female directors and declared with righteous gynocratic outrage: "After all, women did give birth to the whole world!"
Personal Expression and Auteurship
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More than half a century ago, the legendary film director and critic Francois Truffaut put forth in the legendary Cahiers du Cinema an equally legendary claim—the auteur theory. There he hailed the film director as the auteur and film as the venue for personal ideas. The director, in other words, is the author of the film. S/he is the artist and the movie is the masterpiece.
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Jane Campion is one of the most applauded and dynamic filmmakers from New Zealand. Her depiction of strong female characters rebelling against stereotypical roles within society has attracted international praise, as have her story telling techniques of original and striking visual compositions, non-linear editing style and moments of narrative ambiguity.
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Considered to be one of the most influential female filmmakers around the world, Jane Campion is someone who makes films on her terms
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Last Sunday marked the climactic final installment of HBO’s True Detective, a show whose innovative production format may transform and modernize television’s approach to narrative form. Conceived and heavily guided by its showrunner and sole writer Nic Pizzolato, a novelist and creative writing professor before making a foray into television, the show is a pure serial with its eight episodes forming a complete narrative arc.
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“Authorising” Jane Campion: Jane Campion by Deb Verhoeven
Lucy Bolton September 2009 Book Reviews Issue 52
Jane CampionIn 1963, Pauline Kael accused Andrew Sarris and the other auteur theorists of never telling us “by what divining rods they have discovered the élan of a [Vincente] Minnelli or a Nicholas Ray or a Leo McCarey” (1). Kael said of the auteurists: “They’re not critics; they’re inside dopesters -
ane Campion is Australasia’s leading auteur director. As recipient of the Palme d’Or (1993), the Silver Lion (1990) and an Academy Award (1994), she is also one of the most successful female directors in the world.