Tom Kalin
Tom Kalin | |
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New York Lesbian and Gay Film Festival (2002) |
Tom Kalin (born 1962) is a screenwriter, film director, producer, and professor of experimental film at European Graduate School in Saas-Fee.[1]
His debut feature,
Much of Kalin's work touches on issues of
Kalin's last project was Savage Grace, Savage Grace tells the story of the 1972 Barbara Daly Baekeland murder case and stars Julianne Moore as Baekeland.
Tom Kalin has taught graduate-level filmmaking classes at Columbia University School of the Arts,[3] and is currently lecturing at the European Graduate School in Switzerland.
He is a 2011
Life and career
Early life and education
Tom Kalin was born into a lower middle class Irish-Catholic family in Chicago, Illinois. His household consisted of 11 siblings with the oldest being 19 years older than Kalin. Kalin received a BFA in painting from the
Art and activism: Gran Fury & ACT UP
In the 1980s and 1990s, Tom Kalin worked with ACT UP and was one of the founding members of the AIDS activist artist coalition called Gran Fury.[6] Gran Fury created public service announcement videos such as "Kissing Doesn't Kill," part of a campaign that included postcard mailing and city bus advertisements, whose intent was to raise awareness of the failures in government response.
Swoon
During the 1990s, Kalin began a project called Third Known Nest where he made a short 3-4 minute film every year that reflected the loss and pain caused by the AIDS epidemic. In an interview with the La Guardia and Wagner Archives, Kalin describes his belief in the importance of filmmaking: "I think there's something really valuable about making work and being honest about it in very ugly times. It's easy to make work in the happy times of life, but what I think is beneficial to other people is to try to be honest about really painful, difficult times in your life, and I think of that as that. I think of me telling the truth about what happened in a kind of indirect way – they're lyrical, short films; they don't explain everything."[5]
Swoon, Kalin's feature film debut in 1992, was based on the 1924 Leopold and Loeb murder case. Unlike Rope, the 1948 Alfred Hitchcock film about the same case, Swoon sought to depict a stylized allegory relevant for an era filled with fear about the AIDS crisis and anger towards an unresponsive government.[7] The reception to Swoon was mixed; the screening at the San Francisco Gay and Lesbian Film Festival caused criticism about the film's presentation of homosexual deviance.[8] The film's purpose was not negative representation but was instead inspired by anger towards social causes for injustices such as the AIDS crisis, and the 1986 Bowers v. Hardwick case that was used criminalize homosexuality. Kalin wanted to make a "radical, political movie, actually, in a genre form," setting his story in a film noir background. The total cost of the film in 1992 was $250,000; it was filmed in 16mm within 14 days.[5]
Partial filmography
Director
- Savage Grace (2007)
- The Robots of Sodom (2003)
- Third Known Nest (1999)
- Plain Pleasures (1996)
- Nomads (1994)
- Geoffrey Beene 30 (1993)
- Nation (1992)
- Swoon (1992)
Writer
- Third Known Nest (1999)
- Office Killer (1997)
- Geoffrey Beene 30 (1993)
- Nation (1992)
- Swoon (1992)
Producer
- I Shot Andy Warhol (1996) (producer)
- Go Fish (1994) (executive producer)
- Swoon (1992) (co-producer)
References
- ^ "Tom Kalin, Faculty Page, Biography". The European Graduate School. Archived from the original on June 22, 2010. Retrieved July 20, 2010.
- Observer. March 17, 2008
- ^ "Tom Kalin | Columbia University School of the Arts". arts.columbia.edu. Archived from the original on December 27, 2010.
- ^ "Tom Kalin - John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation". www.gf.org. Archived from the original on November 11, 2011.
- ^ a b c Kalin, Tom; Lieberman, Richard K. (April 23, 2015). Koch Scholars interview: Tom Kalin 04-23-2015 (Oral History (interview transcript)). LaGuardia Community College/CUNY: La Guardia and Wagner Archives, Edward I. Koch Collection, Koch Oral History Collection.
- ^ "Thomas S. Kalin faculty profile". Columbia University. Retrieved June 13, 2017.
- ^ Kramer, Gary M. (11 February 2017). "Bad times make great art: The AIDS crisis and the New Queer Cinema." Salon. Retrieved 13 June 2017.
- ^ Benshoff, H. M., & Griffin, S. (2006). Queer images: A history of gay and lesbian film in America. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Pub. p.226-227
External links
- Tom Kalin Faculty Page at European Graduate School. Biography, bibliography, photos and video lectures
- Tom Kalin at Internet Movie Database
- Photo of Tom Kalin
- Kalin's Saving "Grace" Archived August 19, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
- Tom Kalin in the Video Data Bank
- 2008 Bomb Magazine Tom Kalin interviewed by Bette Gordon Archived June 11, 2015, at the Wayback Machine