Derek
Posted: Mon Mar 02, 2009 4:46 pm
Full specs announced:
Derek
A film by Isaac Julien
Written and narrated by Tilda Swinton
Painter, author, gay militant, aids activist and, above all, filmmaker, Derek Jarman was one of Britain’s best-loved and most original artists who touched the lives of everyone he met. Derek is a glorious, yet fitting, remembrance of one of independent film’s greatest treasures.
Derek was lovingly crafted by artist filmmaker Isaac Julien, who assembled a moving collage of rare home movies, film clips and interviews, as well as a cinematic love letter from Academy Award® winner Tilda Swinton written a decade after Jarman’s death.
The film tells the story of Jarman’s life and chronicles everyday England from the 1960s to the early 1990s. It also includes clips of Jarman’s feature-length and Super-8 films. Swinton’s letter serves as the poetic overlay, telling the truth about the life Jarman led and the cultural abyss left by his absence.
Derek has won the following international awards: Grand Jury Prize, Documentary Competition, Seattle International Film Festival; Best Documentary, Milan International Lesbian & Gay Film Festival and Special Teddy, Berlin International Film Festival
Special features
• Filmed introduction by Producer Colin MacCabe (2008, 5 mins)
• The Extended Derek Jarman interview (1991, 69 mins)
• New filmed interview with Isaac Julien (2008, 20 mins)
• Three Super-8mm short films by Derek Jarman: Pirate Tape (W.S. Burroughs Film) (1982,16 mins); TG: Psychic Rally in Heaven (1981, 8 mins); Sloane Square: A Room of One’s Own (1974-6, 9 mins)
• The Attendant (Isaac Julien, 1993, 8 mins)
• The Clearing (Alexis Bistikas, 1994, 7 mins)
• Ostia (Julian Cole, 1987, 26 mins): short film about Pasolini starring Jarman, with optional director’s commentary
• Derek Jarman paintings gallery
• Illustrated booklet with essays by Isaac Julien and B. Ruby Rich; Ossian Ward on Jarman’s paintings; film notes and biographies
Release date: 30 March 2009
RRP: £19.99 / cat. no. BFIVD797 / cert 18
UK / 2008 / colour / 76 mins + 170 mins extra material / original aspect ratio 1.78:1 (16x9)
Optional subtitles for the hearing-impaired