Tao Nørager

Tao Nørager (born 18 April 1974) is a Danish Film director specializing in documentaries.

Tao Nørager
Danish film director Tao Nørager
Born (1974-04-18) 18 April 1974
OccupationFilm director
Years active2005–present
Notable work
Bible Black (documentary)

Nørager grew up in the Danish town Virum with his mother, a free lance creative director and graphics designer for the advertising industry, and his father CASPER, a record producer for Polydor Records. At a young age he became friends with Jurij Moskvitin.

During his early years Nørager quickly grew a fondness for the graffiti drawing style and participated in the graffiti subculture of Copenhagen during the 80's. The original 80's subcultural style is still present in most of Nørager's works.

After graduating from the Danish Advertisingschool, Nørager continued onto The Short & Documentary Filmschool where he graduated in 2005 with the short film De Personlige.

Fashion shows

After a couple of years working in advertising Nørager became friends with the Welsh fashion designer Andrew Mackenzie. Together with a professional camera crew Nørager directed Mackenzie's Fashion Shows in Milan from 2005 to 2007. The use of an entirely professional camera team using multiple stable camera angles and focusing on the detail in the design, instead of watching the audience and high tempo zoom and tilt, together with a professional film editor resulted in a completely new paradigm for fashion photography.

De Personlige

Nørager directed his first picture De Personlige (The Personals) in 2005. It featured a story about a lonely business man who through a personal ad gets a blind date with what he thinks is a beautiful young woman and her child. During the dinner in the lady's apartment she refers to the picture she sent the man as "a bit dated" further more it turns out her now 30-year-old son also lives in the apartment. The business man regrets his involvement and tries to sneak away, with disastrous consequences.[1]

Bible Black: Five Days with Andrew Mackenzie (2011)

Movie poster for the movie Bible Black

After his involvement with filming the fashion shows, Nørager decided to make a very personal documentary about his friend Andrew Mackenzie, Bible Black (2011)[2] . The documentary features Mackenzie's great comeback to the fashion world after a couple years of obscurity due to legal trouble over the trademark name "Andrew Mackenzie".[3] The documentary follows the increasingly anxious Mackenzie in the last days before a fashion show giving a unique view into the fashion world. As opposed to Nørager's fashion shootings featuring a complete film crew, Nørager chose to be the cameraman himself, in that way ensuring that he did not disturb Mackenzie in his work, and also making sure he could track Mackenzie's every move. The production of the movie happened without any public economic support[4] and was screened as a working copy at the Copenhagen International Documentary Festival [5] where it received a standing applause from the audience and positive reviews by numerous newspapers, Politiken going so far as calling it "A true view into the fashion industry".[6] While the Internet magazine look4fashion.dk praised the camera work and called the movie an expirance for fashion lovers and movie lovers alike [7]

After nearly 2.5 years where the movie was shelved in legal battle,[8] the movie was premiered at the International Film Festival Rotterdam in 2011.[9][10]

True Family (2012)

Documentary[11] about a traditional New Orleans jazz singer and street performer Meschiya Lake[12] and the life of musicians in post Hurricane Katrina New Orleans.[13] The Movie is described as a performance film about the near-death and vivid rebirth of both its subject, Meschiya, and the city that surrounds her and giving a novel glimpse of a thriving young creative crew.[14]

The movie premiered on 15 October 2012 during the New Orleans film festival.[15]

Zusa Street (2015)

Documentary [16] about Anders Thordal, a wheelchair bound street artist suffering from Multiple sclerosis who was a famous pioneer in Danish graffiti in the 1980s, his fight for against time, his spirit and humor[17][18] and his art which consists of large colorful cutout wooden letters spelling ZUSA, an acronym for "Zusammen" meaning together in German.[19]

The movie premiered on 17 January 2015 in "Grand Teatret" in Copenhagen[20]

gollark: I always just use horrible accursion to install my favoured OS on cloud platforms.
gollark: Maybe I should run it on 1908254717975918 incredibly low-resource VMs, for purposes.
gollark: Does that actually *work*, over slow WAN networks?
gollark: Is that secure?
gollark: Not "oops, we accidentally made something exactly like a human but it's in a computer and it doesn't like us".

See also

References

  1. "De Personlige" (in Danish). 2008.
  2. Bible Black: Five Days with Andrew Mackenzie on IMDb
  3. KvdM, Daily Tiger (2 February 2011). "ACHTER SCHEMEN (behind the scene)" (in Dutch). p. 8. Retrieved 6 February 2011.
  4. "Bible Black til Rotterdam" (in Danish). FAF, Faglig organisation for freelancere og ansatte i produktion af animation, computerspil, kort- og dokumentarfilm, multimedier, spillefilm og tv. Retrieved 6 February 2011.
  5. Screened at CPH:DOX 2008, CPH:DOX, retrieved Aug 5, 2009.
  6. Anne Andersen, Politiken (August 9, 2008). "Et ægte blik ind i modeverdenen" (in Danish) (e126f978). p. 5.
  7. "Verdenspremiere om Andrew macenzie" (in Danish). August 7, 2008. Archived from the original on July 19, 2011. Retrieved Aug 5, 2009.
  8. Ito Bruun, Mika (3 February 2011). "Rå modedokumentar på festival". ekkofilm.dk. Retrieved 6 February 2011.
  9. "Bible Black til Rotterdam". FAF, Faglig organisation for freelancere og ansatte i produktion af animation, computerspil, kort- og dokumentarfilm, multimedier, spillefilm og tv. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
  10. "Insecure, extravaganza designer Andrew MacKenzie filmed whilst preparing his comeback show. Intimate portrait of an exceptional designer". International Film Festival Rotterdam. Retrieved 24 January 2011.
  11. "True Family". True Family.
  12. "The voice of Meschiya Lake". www.indiegogo.com.
  13. True Family on IMDb
  14. Bill Arceneaux (October 11, 2012). "MoviePass Review: True Familu". moviepass. But what really impressed me here is how, through this singer, we are given a novel glimpse of a thriving young creative crew.
  15. "Of particular note is True Family, a documentary about Meschiya Lake and the experience of performing on Royal Street". offbeat.
  16. "ZUSA STREET official trailer". Roaddox on vimeo.
  17. Runge, Morten (2015-01-11). "Kultursøndag". Kultursøndag (Interview). Interviewed by Morten Runge. Copenhagen. Retrieved 2015-01-14.
  18. Madsen, Rune Bruun (January 2015). "Kunst fra kørestolen". ekkofilm. ekkofilm. ekkofilm. Retrieved 20 March 2016. Som dokumentarist har Tao Nørager et talent for at spotte den gode historie længe før alle andre – og slå hurtigt til.
  19. Holmgaard, Sandra (2015-01-13). "ZUSA ER SAMARBEJDE". scleroseforeningen.dk. Copenhagen. Retrieved 2015-01-14. Dokumentarist Tao Nørager har fulgt Anders Thordal med sit kamera i to år. På grund af sclerose har Anders brug for hjælp til det meste. Det afholder ham dog ikke fra at lave kunst i Københavns gader og stræder
  20. "Kunst fra kørestolen, Zusa Street". ekkofilm.dk.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.