Alan Brown is an award winning American director and author.[1]
Brown's first film, the half-hour narrative O Beautiful, won the Future Filmmaker Award at the 2002 Palm Springs International Short Film Festival, and was an official selection of the 2003 Sundance Film Festival. Singled out by critics as "powerful and ultimately beautiful", and "a rare piece of film making", it is available on the Strand Releasing DVD, Boys Life 4.
Brown's feature debut, Book of Love,[2] which stars Simon Baker, Frances O'Connor, Gregory Smith, and Bryce Dallas Howard, was praised by critics for its "creepy eroticism and sly intelligence", and as "a movie that feels about as real as it's possible to be". It premiered in the Dramatic Competition at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival, and was broadcast on Showtime, the Sundance Channel, and Starz. The DVD was released by Sundance Channel Home Entertainment.
His most recent feature film, Superheroes,[3] the story of an Iraq War veteran with posttraumatic stress disorder, has been described by critics as "wrenching" and "brimming with rare compassion". It was the winner of numerous prizes, including the Feature Filmmaker’s Award at the 2007 Avignon/New York Film Festival, the Maverick Spirit Award at the 2008 Cinequest Film Festival, Special Jury Mention at the Austin Film Festival 2008, and both the Narrative Feature and Best Film Awards at the 2008 Brooklyn Arts Council International Film Festival.
Brown currently has several film projects in various stages of development, including Swan Lake, a thriller set in a small college town and an adaptation of Audrey Hepburn's Neck, which is set in Japan. His latest film, Private Romeo, is a contemporary adaptation of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet set in a military academy. It will be shown in San Francisco in June, 2011 during the 35th annual San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival produced by Frameline.
Brown is also the author of the novel Audrey Hepburn's Neck,[4] which was translated into eight languages and won the Pacific Rim Book Prize. The recipient of National Endowment for the Arts and New York Foundation for the Arts fellowships, he was also awarded a Fulbright Fellowship in Journalism to Japan, where he lived for seven years. He has been the recipient of numerous artist residency fellowships, including those to the MacDowell Colony, Yaddo, Ucross Foundation, and Edward Albee Foundation.
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