Mark Jenkin

Mark Jenkin
Occupation Writer/Director/Producer/Editor
Years active 1999–present
Awards Frank Copplestone for First Time Director for Golden Burn

Mark Jenkin is a British filmmaker, film editor and screenwriter based in Cornwall.

Career

Mark Jenkin first came to notice when he won the Frank Copplestone First Time Director Award at The Celtic Film & Television Festival in 2002 for his debut film Golden Burn.[1] He followed this success with numerous award-winning documentaries, shorts and low-budget feature films including The Man Who Needed a Traffic Light, The Rabbit and The Lobsterman, a documentary on the life of Cornish playwright Nick Darke. His 2007 feature film The Midnight Drives was described by Derek Malcolm, film critic for The Evening Standard as "A moving film about parentage with an exceptional performance from Colin Holt at its centre".[2]

Filmography

  • 2017 Tomato (short) - Director/Editor
  • 2016 The Road to Zennor (short) - Director/Editor/Writer
  • 2016 The Essential Cornishman (short) - Director/Editor/Writer
  • 2015 Dear Marianne (short) - Director/Editor/Writer
  • 2015 Bronco's House (short) - Director/Editor/Writer
  • 2009 Aurora's Kiss (short) – Director/Editor/Writer
  • 2007 The Midnight Drives – Director/Writer/Editor
  • 2007 The Lark – Editor
  • 2004 New Reed – Cinematographer/Editor
  • 2004 The Rabbit – Director/Writer/Editor
  • 2004 The Wrecking Season – Editor
  • 2003 The Man Who Needed a Traffic Light – Director/Writer/Editor
  • 2002 Golden Burn – Director/Writer Editor
  • 1999 Walking with Dinosaurs – Production Assistant

References

  1. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 July 2011. Retrieved 2013-03-20.
  2. "Nighttime screening of The Midnight Drives". West Briton.
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