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Robert Kolodny (filmmaker)

American filmmaker From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Robert Kolodny (filmmaker)
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Robert Kolodny is an American film director, writer and cinematographer. His 2023 debut feature film, The Featherweight,[1] premiered at the 80th Venice International Film Festival.[2][3] He was a cinematographer for the Peabody Award-winning documentary film All the Beauty and the Bloodshed,[4] released in 2022.

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Early life

Kolodny grew up in Freehold Township, New Jersey, and attended Freehold High School[5][6] where he began making films at a young age after developing a fascination with motion pictures. He studied Film Direction at the School of Visual Arts[7] in New York City, where he studied under Manfred Kirchheimer.[8] During this time Kolodny began an artistic collaboration with Chilean poet and artist Cecilia Vicuña.[9]

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Career

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In 2010, Kolodny formed the production company House of Nod.[10] Through this company he began to create commercial work as well as music videos with Brooklyn based artists such as Japanese Breakfast,[11] Frankie Cosmos,[12] LVL UP[13] and Gabby's World.[14]

In 2013 Robert Kolodny won an Emmy for directing a season of the culinary TV program Frankie Cooks.[15] The same year he directed the short film Fly on Out which won the grand prize at the AbelCine Vision Research Miro High-Speed Inspiration Challenge.[16]

Around this time Kolodny began working as a documentary cinematographer, initially on Lenny Cooke by the Safdie brothers and then with Robert Greene on Kate Plays Christine and Bisbee '17.[17] He worked his way up to being the director of photography for Greene's Netflix film Procession,[18] Alex Ross Perry's Pavements[19] and one of the cinematographers of the Peabody Award-winning and Academy Award nominated All the Beauty and the Bloodshed by Laura Poitras.[20] For several years Kolodny was working on a nonfiction film about Bulgarian Olympian Serafim Todorov.[21]

In 2018, he created the film elements for Disappeared Quipu which appeared at the Brooklyn Museum, the Museum of Fine Arts Boston and MALBA.[22] The massive site-specific art art piece included a looping four channel video projection composed of intricately drifting ancient Andean textiles. During the COVID-19 pandemic Kolodny collaborated playwright Taylor Mac on several of musical specials that streamed online and then later were performed live.[23] In 2022 he was named one of Doc NYC's 40 under 40.[24]

Key collaborators in Kolodny's work include his cinematographer brother Adam Kolodny,[25] producer Bennett Elliott,[26] Robert Greene,[27] Alex Ross Perry[28] and Sean Price Williams.[29] Robert Kolodny is a professor of film at his alma mater, the School of Visual Arts, where he teaches directing and screenwriting.[30]

The Featherweight

The Featherweight was Robert Kolodny's feature film directorial debut.[31] It tracks the post-retirement career of former world champion boxer Willie Pep and his troubled road to a comeback, as a direct cinema film crew documents his daily life.[32] Starring James Madio, Ron Livingston, Stephen Lang, Keir Gilchrist and Ruby Wolf, the film received critical acclaim for its realism and intricate craft.[33] Guy Lodge from Variety said: "Kolodny puts nary a foot wrong in his precise replication of a midcentury vérité aesthetic and gaze, from the particular grain and thrust of the camerawork to the authentically abrasive tone and tenor of the performances."[34]

The Featherweight premiered at the 80th Venice International Film Festival in the Orizzonti competition.[35] Later it was selected as the closing film of the 54th International Film Festival of India.[36] Kolodny was received the John Schlesinger Narrative Award from the Provincetown International Film Festival[37] and the Peter Brunette Award for Best Director at RiverRun International Film Festival[38] for his work on the film.

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Influences

Robert Kolodny has publicly cited the work of several directors as being influential to him, including John Cassavetes[39] and Martin Scorsese[40][41] as well as the direct cinema movement,[42] specifically the work of D. A. Pennebaker and Albert and David Maysles.[43]

Filmography

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Music videos

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References

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