Kurt Kuenne(I)
- Director
- Composer
- Editor
Kurt Kuenne is an award-winning filmmaker and composer of both fiction
and documentary films. He is a graduate of the USC School of Cinematic
Arts, where he won the Harold Lloyd Scholarship in Film Editing, and
where he also studied film scoring at the USC School of Music under the
tutelage of classic film composers Buddy Baker and David Raksin. His
first feature, the teen drama "Scrapbook" (1999), landed him on
Filmmaker magazine's 25 New Faces of Indie Film feature, and he
followed it with "Drive-In Movie Memories" (2001), a documentary about
outdoor movies which opened the 2001 Telluride Film Festival and played
nationally on PBS.
In 2002, he won the AMPAS Nicholl Fellowship in Screenwriting for his screenplay "Mason Mule", while his screenplay "Explode" made the quarterfinals in the same year. He then directed a series of black & white short musical comedies - "Rent-A-Person" (2004), "Validation" (2006), "Slow" (2007) and "The Phone Book" (2008) - which won 40+ awards at 120+ film festivals worldwide.
In 2008, he completed his 6 year passion project, the documentary "Dear Zachary: a letter to a son about his father", which premiered at the Slamdance Film Festival. The film was released by Oscilloscope Laboratories and MSNBC Films, was named one of the Top 5 Documentaries of 2008 by the National Board of Review, won numerous awards and placed on more than 40 critics' lists of the Ten Best Films of 2008. "Dear Zachary" inspired the creation of Bill C-464 in Canadian Parliament, which reformed Canada's criminal code when it became law on December 15, 2010. (An epilogue chronicling this process - "The Legacy of Dear Zachary: A Journey to Change Law" - was released on the web in 2013.) In 2011, he collaborated for the second time with actor TJ Thyne ("Validation", "Bones") on the fiction feature "Shuffle", a mystery/fantasy about a man who begins experiencing his life out of order, which was released by Screen Media Films and won numerous awards at film festivals worldwide, including the 2013 Frank Capra Award.
His work as composer includes re-scoring the restoration of the silent classic "Cyrano de Bergerac" (1925) and writing the book, music and lyrics for the stage musical adaptation of Frank Beddor's New York Times-bestselling novel "The Looking Glass Wars".
In 2002, he won the AMPAS Nicholl Fellowship in Screenwriting for his screenplay "Mason Mule", while his screenplay "Explode" made the quarterfinals in the same year. He then directed a series of black & white short musical comedies - "Rent-A-Person" (2004), "Validation" (2006), "Slow" (2007) and "The Phone Book" (2008) - which won 40+ awards at 120+ film festivals worldwide.
In 2008, he completed his 6 year passion project, the documentary "Dear Zachary: a letter to a son about his father", which premiered at the Slamdance Film Festival. The film was released by Oscilloscope Laboratories and MSNBC Films, was named one of the Top 5 Documentaries of 2008 by the National Board of Review, won numerous awards and placed on more than 40 critics' lists of the Ten Best Films of 2008. "Dear Zachary" inspired the creation of Bill C-464 in Canadian Parliament, which reformed Canada's criminal code when it became law on December 15, 2010. (An epilogue chronicling this process - "The Legacy of Dear Zachary: A Journey to Change Law" - was released on the web in 2013.) In 2011, he collaborated for the second time with actor TJ Thyne ("Validation", "Bones") on the fiction feature "Shuffle", a mystery/fantasy about a man who begins experiencing his life out of order, which was released by Screen Media Films and won numerous awards at film festivals worldwide, including the 2013 Frank Capra Award.
His work as composer includes re-scoring the restoration of the silent classic "Cyrano de Bergerac" (1925) and writing the book, music and lyrics for the stage musical adaptation of Frank Beddor's New York Times-bestselling novel "The Looking Glass Wars".