Eduardo Escorel
Eduardo Escorel | |
---|---|
Born | Eduardo Escorel de Morais 1945 (1945) (age 79) São Paulo, Brazil |
Occupation(s) | Editor, director |
Years active | 1965–present |
Relatives | Lauro Escorel (brother) |
Eduardo Escorel de Morais (born 1945), most known as Eduardo Escorel, is a Brazilian film editor and director. He debuted as an editor on the Joaquim Pedro de Andrade's The Priest and the Girl (1965).[1] With his first feature film, Lição de Amor, he won the Best Director Award at the 1976 Gramado Film Festival.[2] He was also awarded Best Director for his second film, Ato de Violência, this time at the 1980 Brasília Film Festival.[3] He won Best Editing Award for Guerra Conjugal and O Chamado de Deus at the 1974 and 2000 Brasília Film Festival respectively,[4] and for Dois Perdidos numa Noite Suja at the 2002 Gramado Film Festival.[2]
Selected filmography
- The Priest and the Girl (1965; editor, second unit director)
- My Home Is Copacabana (1965; actor)
- Entranced Earth (1967; editor)
- The Brave Warrior (1968; editor)
- Antonio das Mortes (1969; editor)
- Macunaíma (1969; editor)
- Cabezas cortadas (1970; editor)
- The Seven Headed Lion (1970; editor)
- Joanna Francesa (1973; editor)
- They Don't Wear Black-tie (1981; editor)
- Twenty Years Later (1984; editor)
- Villa-Lobos: A Life of Passion (2000; editor)
- Dois Perdidos numa Noite Suja (2002; editor)
- Paulo Moura - Alma Brasileira (2013; director)
References
- ^ Ramos, Fernão; Miranda, Luiz Felipe (2000). Enciclopédia do cinema brasileiro. Senac. pp. 216–217. ISBN 9788573590937.
- ^ a b "Festival de Gramado – Premiados" (in Portuguese). Gramado Film Festival. Archived from the original on July 1, 2013. Retrieved July 25, 2014.
- ^ "Ato de Violência" (in Portuguese). Cinemateca Brasileira. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved May 2, 2014.
- ^ "O montador do Cinema Novo ganha o segundo Candango". O Estado de S. Paulo (in Portuguese). Grupo Estado. December 19, 2000. Archived from the original on May 4, 2014. Retrieved May 2, 2014.
External links
- Eduardo Escorel at IMDb
- v
- t
- e
- Luis Sérgio Person (1973)
- Denoy de Oliveira (1974)
- Walter Hugo Khouri (1975)
- Eduardo Escorel (1976)
- Bruno Barreto (1977)
- João Batista de Andrade (1978)
- Jorge Bodansky and Wolf Gauer (1979)
- Carlos Hugo Christensen (1980)
- Carlos Alberto Prates Correia (1981)
- Djalma Limongi Batista (1982)
- Ana Carolina (1983)
- Denoy de Oliveira (1984)
- André Klotzel (1985)
- Carlos Reichenbach (1986)
- Wilson Barros (1987)
- Guilherme de Almeida Prado (1988)
- Murilo Salles (1989)
- Miguel Faria Jr. (1990)
- Neville D'Almeida (1991)
- Pedro Almodóvar (1992)
- Eliseo Subiela (1993)
- Mario Brenta (1994)
- Jorge Fons (1995)
- Murilo Salles (1996)
- Beto Brant (1997)
- Bruno Stagnaro / Israel Caetano (1998)
- Julio Medem (1999)
- Francisco José Lombardi (2000)
- André Klotzel (2001)
- Anna Muylaert (2002)
- Ricardo Elias (2003)
- Joel Zito Araújo (2004)
- Tizuka Yamasaki (2005)
- Andrea Tonacci (2006)
- Paulo Caldas (2007)
- Domingos de Oliveira (2008)
- Vincent Carelli / Paulo Nascimento (2009)
- Jeferson De (2010)
- Gustavo Pizzi (2011)
- Kleber Mendonça Filho (2012)
- Andradina Azevedo / Dida Andrade (2013)
- Marcelo Galvão (2014)
- Chico Teixeira (2015)
- Domingos de Oliveira (2016)
- Laís Bodanzky (2017)
- André Ristum (2018)
This article about a Brazilian film director is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e