Hilary Tjader Harris (December 9, 1929 – October 26, 1999) was a documentary filmmaker, one of the pioneers of time-lapse photography. The documentary, Seawards the Great Ships, directed by Harris, won the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film in 1962.[1][2] The Squeeze (1964), a short experimental film about overpopulation won a Golden Gate Award for best fiction at the San Francisco Film Festival in 1964. [3]
Filmography
edit- Longhorn (1951)
- Generation (1956)
- Highway (1958)
- Polaris Action 1960
- Seawards the Great Ships (1961)
- The Dialogues of Archibald Macleish and Mark Van Doren (1962)
- The Walk (1962)
- The Farmer and I (1963)
- Seas of Sweet Water (1964)
- The Squeeze (1964)
- The Draft Card Burners (circa 1965)
- Patterns for Communication (1966)
- 9 Variations on a Dance Theme (1966)
- The Nuer (1970)
- Organism (1975)
- Technology in Public Service (1976)
- South Street Seaport (1976)
Notes
editA DVD, titled The Films of Hilary Harris, was released by Mystic Fire Video in 2006. The four films on the DVD are Organism, 9 Variations, Highway and Longhorn. The DVD also includes an interview with Harris, which contains the short films Generation and Highway.
References
edit- ^ "Hilary Harris". Variety. 2000-01-05. Retrieved 2008-01-10.
- ^ "The 34th Academy Awards (1962) Nominees and Winners". oscars.org.
- ^ Olszynko-Gryn, Jesse; Ellis, Patrick (2018). "Malthus at the Movies: Science, Cinema, and Activism around Z.P.G. and Soylent Green". Journal of Cinema and Media Studies. 58 (1): 47–69. doi:10.2307/26608643. ISSN 2578-4900.