Martin de Thurah

Martin de Thurah
Born (1974-04-29) 29 April 1974 (age 49)
Copenhagen, Denmark
Occupation(s)Director, screenwriter, cinematographer

Martin de Thurah (born 29 April 1974 in Copenhagen) is a Danish film director, screenwriter, cinematographer and music video director.

De Thurah graduated from National Film School of Denmark in 2002.[1]

Awards

  • The music video for Carpark North's "Human" won DMA ("Danish Grammy") for Danish Music Video of the Year in 2006. It also won Best Music Video at 2005 RESFEST, Los Angeles and a "Grand Prix" at the Festival International des Art du Clip in Provence.[2]
  • He was nominated for Robert Award (2006) in the category Best Special Effects/Lighting for Allegro.[3]
  • In 2008, he won the Robert Award for Best Animation for his short film Ung mand falder.[3]
  • At the 2008 Chicago International Children's Film Festival, his short film Vi der blev tilbage received the Children's Jury Award for a Live-Action Short Film or Video.[3]
  • In 2008, de Thurah's IKEA commercial "Home" won Best Direction at the Creative Circle Awards in Copenhagen and was awarded at the Hugo Television Awards in Chicago.[1]
  • At UK Music Video Awards 2009, de Thurah won the Best Director, Best Cinematography and Best Visual Effects awards for his video for Glasvegas’ "Flowers & Football Tops", and Best Pop Video award for Will Young’s "Changes".[4] He was also nominated in several other categories.
  • The music video for the single "When I Grow Up" by Fever Ray, as well as videos for two Mew singles, "Introducing Palace Players" and "Repeaterbeater", were nominated at 2010 Bergen International Film Festival in the Scandinavias Best Music Video category.
  • At UK Music Video Awards 2012, the music video for Feist's "The Bad In Each Other" won Best Cinematography in A Video.[5]

Filmography

Director

Short films

Year Film Role
1999 Alice' Alice Director, writer
2007 Ung mand falder (Young Man Falling) Director
2008 Vi der blev tilbage (We Who Stayed Behind) Director, writer
2011 Rainbow Monkeys Director, writer
2012 Hopper Stories Director, writer
Mountain Director

Documentaries

  • På danske læber live (2004) - music documentary

Music videos

Year Artist Song Notes
2004 Lise Westzynthius "Séance"
Epo-555 "Le Beat's on Fire"
2005 Editors "Bullets"
Carpark North "Human"
"Best Day"
Spleen United "In Peak Fitness Condition"
Mew "Special"
Röyksopp "What Else Is There?"
2006 The Futureheads "Skip to the End"
2008 Kanye West "Flashing Lights" Version 2
Will Young "Changes
2009 Glasvegas "Flowers & Football Tops"
Fever Ray "When I Grow Up"
Mew "Introducing Palace Players"
"Repeaterbeater" Co-directed by Adam Hashemi
and Lasse Martinussen[6][7]
2010 "Beach"
Fallulah "Give Us A Little Love"
James Blake "Limit to Your Love"
2011 "Lindisfarne"
2012 Feist "The Bad In Each Other"
"Anti-Pioneer"
David Byrne & St. Vincent "Who"
2013 James Blake "Retrograde"
2014 Röyksopp & Robyn "Do It Again"

Other filmography

Year Film Role
1999 Alice' Alice (short) Visual effects, storyboard artist
2002 Der er en yndig mand (short) Graphics
2003 Reconstruction Production Designer
Mot moi Viet Nam (TV series documentary) Graphic artist
Himmelnattens kejser - en film om synlighed (documentary) Visual effects
2004 Boomerang-drengen (TV documentary short) Visual effects producer, cinematographer
På danske læber live (video documentary) Camera operator
Min morfars morder (documentary) Animator
2005 Allegro Visual effects
2008 Roskilde (documentary) Co-director

References

  1. ^ a b "Martin de Thurah Videography". After the Circle. Archived from the original on 2013-12-20. Retrieved 2013-06-10.
  2. ^ "Carpark North: Biography". carparknorth.com. Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 2013-06-09.
  3. ^ a b c "Martin de Thurah - Awards". IMDb. Retrieved 2013-06-10.
  4. ^ Knight, David (2009-10-14). "UK Music Video Awards 2009 – top honours to Shynola, Martin de Thurah, David Wilson, Dawn Shadforth and Carole Burton Fairbrother at joyful and emotional second UK MVAs". Promo News. Retrieved 2013-06-10.
  5. ^ "UK Music Video Awards 2012 winners announced". Creative Review. Archived from the original on 2013-01-25. Retrieved 2013-06-10.
  6. ^ "Mew "Repeaterbeater" on Vimeo". Vimeo. 2011-04-23. Retrieved 2013-06-16.
  7. ^ "MEW BEACH on Vimeo". Vimeo. 2010-10-18. Retrieved 2013-06-10.

External links

  • Martin de Thurah at IMDb
  • Martin de Thurah on IMVDb
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