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[[Image:The Most Fun You Can Have Dying - Paris.tiff|thumb|right|300px|Still from Kirstin Marcon's feature film '''The Most Fun You Can Have Dying''' starring [[Roxanne Mesquida]]<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0581953/ Roxanne Mesquida IMDB]</ref> & [[Matt Whelan]]<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/name/nm3376527/Matt Whelan IMDB]</ref>.
[[Image:The Most Fun You Can Have Dying - Paris.tiff|thumb|right|300px|Still from Kirstin Marcon's feature film '''The Most Fun You Can Have Dying''' starring [[Roxanne Mesquida]]<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0581953/ Roxanne Mesquida IMDB]</ref> & [[Matt Whelan]]<ref>[http://www.imdb.com/name/nm3376527/ Matt Whelan IMDB]</ref>.
Photographer: Laurent Clauwaert]]
Photographer: Laurent Clauwaert]]



Revision as of 07:04, 1 February 2012

File:The Most Fun You Can Have Dying - Paris.tiff
Still from Kirstin Marcon's feature film The Most Fun You Can Have Dying starring Roxanne Mesquida[1] & Matt Whelan[2]. Photographer: Laurent Clauwaert
File:Shesracing.jpg
Still from Kirstin Marcon's film She's Racing which won a Silver Plaque at the Chicago International Film Festival. Starring Sophia Hawthorne.[3] Photographer: Craig Wright [4]
File:Picnicstops.jpg
Still from Kirstin Marcon's film Picnic Stops, starring Miriama Smith and Daniel Cowley.[5] Photographer: Craig Wright


Kirstin Marcon is a New Zealand screenwriter and film director.


Her debut 35mm short film as writer & director, She's Racing was made in association with the New Zealand Film Commission in 2000. It screened in competition at Edinburgh Film Festival, Torino Film Festival, and Chicago International Film Festival (where it won a Silver Plaque). It also screened at Telluride Film Festival, with Australian indie hit Chopper (film).


Her subsequent 35mm short Picnic Stops, also made in association with the New Zealand Film Commission, was selected for Competition and Official Selection at a number of festivals including the Hof International Film Festival, Germany (2004), Expression en Corto International Film Festival, Mexico (2005), and the 27th International Women's Film Festival of Créteil, France, 2005.


Her debut feature film as writer and director The Most Fun You Can Have Dying was shot in Europe (London, Paris, Monaco, Milan, Munich, Berlin, Venice) and New Zealand (Auckland, Hamilton) in 2010/11 and is financed by the New Zealand Film Commission. It stars Roxane Mesquida (Fr) and Matt Whelan (NZ). Based on the novel Seraphim Blues by Steven Gannaway, it is produced by Alex Cole-Baker[6] of Chocolate Fish Pictures[7] and executive produced by Tim White.[8]


Filmography

Writer & Director

References



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