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Samir (filmmaker)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Samir Jamal al Din (born 29 July 1955), known professionally as Samir, is a Swiss filmmaker, film producer and director.

Life and work

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Samir was born the son of a Swiss mother and an Iraqi father in Baghdad. Samir's full name is Samir Jamal al Din / Samir Jamal Aldin. His family moved to Switzerland in 1961, where he went to school. He attended the School of Design in Zurich (today's ZHdK), completed an apprenticeship as a typographer (1971–73) and subsequently trained as a cameraman with Condor Films. From 1983, he worked as a freelance director and cinematographer. From 1984 to 1991 he was a writer and member of Videoladen Zurich (Video Store Zurich). In 1994, he and documentary filmmaker Werner Schweizer overtook the Dschoint Ventschr [de] film production company.

From the mid-1980s, Samir began to produce his own films. In the 1990s he worked on behalf of Condor Films[1] as a director of series like Eurocops[2] and television films for German TV stations. His list of works – as a writer, director and/or producer – now includes over 40 short and feature films for cinema and TV.[3][4]

In 2006 Samir received the Aargau Culture Award (Aargauer Kulturpreis).[5]

Samir has chosen to only use his first name, as explained in this quote:

...why? "Jamal al Din means 'beauty of religion'. I do not know how you would feel if you were not very religious, and would always have to say, 'Hello, my name is Beauty of Religion'," says [he] ...For me Samir is perfect, as that means 'Storyteller'.[6]

Filmography

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as director (selection)

  • 1984 Stummfilm / Silent Film (short film)
  • 1985 Schiefkörper-Video / Division Ring Video
  • 1986 Morlove – Eine Ode für Heisenberg / Morlove – An Ode for Heisenberg (feature film, also writer)
  • 1988 Filou (feature film, also writer)
  • 1991 Immer & Ewig / Always & Forever (feature film, also production, screenplay, cinematography))
  • 1992 (It was) Just a job (also writer, camera)
  • 1993 Babylon 2 (documentary)
  • 1994 Eurocops
  • 1994 La productrice
  • 1995 Die Drei – Hass; Jetzt oder nie; Todesoperation / The Three – Hatred; Now or Never; Death Surgery
  • 1996 Tödliche Schwesternliebe [de] / Deadly Sister Love
  • 1997 Angélique (Blind Date)
  • 1997 La eta Knabino (short film, also screenplay, production supervisor)
  • 1998 Projecziuns Tibetanas (documentary, screenwriting, cinematography, editing)
  • 2001 Norman Plays Golf (also screenplay)
  • 2002 Forget Baghdad: Jews and Arabs – The Iraqi Connection (documentary, screenwriter, editor, cast)
  • 2003 ZwischenSprach / InterimLanguage (documentary, also screenplay)
  • 2005 Snow White [de] (feature film, also screenplay)
  • 2010 Escher, der Engel und die Fibonacci-Zahlen / Escher, the angels and the Fibonacci numbers (documentary, also screenplay)
  • 2014 Iraqi Odyssey (documentary, also production, screenplay, cinematography, editing, cast)

As co-/producer a.o.: documentary film White Terror by Daniel Schweizer (2005), mockumentary Birdseye by Stephen Beckner and Michael C. Huber (2002), feature films Nachbeben / Aftershock by Stina Werenfels (2006), Das Fräulein by Andrea Staka (2006), Opération Libertad by Nicolas Wadimoff (2012), Dawn by Romed Wyder.

References

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  1. ^ Samir mentioned (a.o.) in the Filmography (selection) section at Condor Films company portrait (condorfilms.com)
  2. ^ Samir mentioned (a.o.) in the Eurocops Schweiz press release of SRF (srf.ch)
  3. ^ SWISS FILMS: Samir at Swiss Films [de] (swissfilms.ch)
  4. ^ SAMIR Producer, Author, Director – bio- and filmography at Dschoint Ventschr [de] (dschointventschr.ch)
  5. ^ Samir erhält den Aargauer Kulturpreis 2006, media release, AZ Medien [de] (azmediengruppe.ch), 4/19/06
  6. ^ "Iraqi Odyssey" auf der Berlinale: Geschichten aus dem Sorgenland ("Iraqi Odyssey" at Berlinale: Stories from the Worries Land), by Daniela Sannwald, Tagesspiegel (tagesspiegel.de), 2/8/15
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Reviews

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Iraqi Odyssey (2014)

Forget Baghdad (2002)