Anja Marquardt
Anja Marquardt is a German film director who won two major international film awards for her first feature film She's Lost Control. Marquardt was previously known for her screen-writing and directing of critically acclaimed short films. Her first full-length movie explored the emotional journey of a young female student who works as a sexual surrogate and falls in love with an unusually recalcitrant client. Certain aspects of Marquardt’s work have been contrasted to Ben Lewin's similarly themed feature film The Sessions that uses a diametrically opposite approach to the topic.[1] Marquardt stated that she intended "not to write a love story, but an anti-love story."[2]
Early life
A child of German parents, Marquardt was born and raised in the divided city of Berlin, Germany. After completing her secondary school education, she enrolled in the interdisciplinary "Communication in Social and Economic Contexts" program at the Berlin University of the Arts. Marquardt started traveling extensively and lived for brief periods in Arizona, Granada, Strasbourg, and Laos.[3]
Career
After graduating from the University of the Arts in Berlin, Marquardt spent a number of years working in film project development and production in Germany. Subsequently she worked in France as a commissioning Fiction editor for the Franco-German TV network ARTE. In 2007, Marquardt was accepted as a Dean's Fellow in the Tisch School of the Arts at New York University to pursue graduate studies in the Master of Fine Arts program. She led and collaborated on several short film projects as a writer, producer and director as well as in ancillary roles.[4] Her short film "Thanksgiving", one of her earliest works, won the "best student short award" at the Cinequest Film Festival in 2009 and "best short film" at the 92YTribeca Showcase in 2010.[5] A short documentary "Our Lady of Mercy" premiered in a screening at the Cannes Film Festival in 2009.[3] Marquardt graduated from New York University with a MFA degree in 2013.[6]
Marquardt’s first full-length feature, the low-budget drama film She's Lost Control, was completed in 2014. The script was inspired by Marquardt's studies of Japanese caretaker robots who touch patients to make them feel calmer and the sex therapy concepts of Masters and Johnson. In the film, Marquardt explores the interactions and emotional stresses that arise in the triangle of a therapist, sexual surrogate and patient. The movie project was financed with seed funding from the German Consulate General in New York and through a Kickstarter campaign.[7] It was executive-produced by award-winning director Oren Moverman.[8] The film, which premiered at the Berlin Film Festival in Germany in 2014, won the Forum's section top award, the CICAE International Confederation of Art Cinemas Award. She's Lost Control had its premiere in the U.S. at the SXSW Film Festival and its initial screening in New York City at the New Directors/New Films Festival at the Film Society of Lincoln Center and MoMa, where the curators described it as a "stylish, deeply unnerving, and profound film on an intangible modern issue".[9] The film was released to general audiences in the U.S. in March and in Germany in May, 2015.[1][10]
Awards
In recognition of her prize-winning work in cinematography, Marquardt was awarded a prestigious Villa Aurora Fellowship in 2016.[11]
Filmography
References
- ^ a b "Variety Magazine Film Review - She's Lost Control". Retrieved January 30, 2016.
- ^ "Indiewire - Women and Hollywood". Retrieved January 30, 2016.
- ^ a b "In the Palace Film Program 2010". Retrieved January 30, 2016.
- ^ a b c "IMDB Database". Retrieved January 30, 2016.
- ^ a b c d "Raw Talent Agency 2015". Retrieved January 30, 2016.
- ^ "NYU News". Retrieved January 30, 2016.
- ^ "Kickstarter". Retrieved January 30, 2016.
- ^ "Filmmaker Magazine". Retrieved January 30, 2016.
- ^ "Film Society of Lincoln Center". Retrieved January 30, 2016.
- ^ "www.arsenal-berlin.de". Retrieved January 30, 2016.
- ^ "www.villa-aurora.org". Retrieved January 30, 2016.
- ^ "www.firstrunfestival.com". Retrieved January 30, 2016.