Danish film director (born 1978)
Katrine Philp |
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Born | (1978-12-14) December 14, 1978 (age 45) |
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Nationality | Danish |
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Occupation | Film director |
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Katrine Philp (born December 14, 1978) is a Danish film director. She initially studied film production design at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts and later graduated from the National Film School of Denmark as a documentary film director in 2009.[1][2]
Career
Philp started her career in 2009 with her graduation film Book of Miri. The film was selected for the IDFA Student Competition and won the European Young CIVIS Media award in Germany.[3][4]
Philp is a former dancer. After being invited to a ballroom training session, she met with dancers who would become the protagonists of her first feature documentary Dance For Me in 2013.[5] The film was nominated at the 2015 Emmy Awards in the category ‘Outstanding Arts and Culture Programming’.[6]
In 2018, Philp directed False Confessions. The film focuses on the defence lawyer Jane Fisher-Byrialsen, who works on false confessions cases in USA, including the ones of Korey Wise, Malthe Thomsen [da] and Renay Lynch. Due to interrogation techniques that use brutal psychological manipulation, including lying about evidence, to secure a confession, they have falsely confessed to crimes they didn't commit.[7][8] The film won the Special Jury Award for Excellence in Social Justice at Los Angeles Film Festival in 2018.[9]
Philp directed in 2020 the documentary Beautiful Something Left Behind, which follows young children during a period of their grief, as they just lost one or both parents.[10][11][12]
The film was previously called An Elephant in the Room and was part of the main competition in the 2020 SXSW Film Festival under this title.[13] Although the festival was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the competition took place and Philp won the Grand Jury Prize for Best Documentary.[14][15]
Personal life
Philp is married to the cinematographer Adam Morris Philp with whom she has made several films, including Beautiful Something Left Behind. For this film, they spent a year following the kids and moved their children in New Jersey for the filming.[16][17] During this period, Philp's dad died unexpectedly.
Filming kids going through grief and experiencing a similar loss helped her go through her own grief. Philp dedicated the film to her father.[18][19]
Filmography
Awards
Film
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Year
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Category
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Film Festival
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Beautiful Something Left Behind [cy; da] (also known as An Elephant in the Room)
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2020
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Winner Grand Jury Award – Documentary Feature
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SXSW
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2020
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The Unicef Prize[20]
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Japan Prize
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2020
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Honourable Mention[21]
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Nordische Filmtage Lübeck
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False Confessions [cy; da]
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2018
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Winner Politiken's Audience Award
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CPH:DOX
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2018
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Winner Special Jury Award for Excellence in Social Justice
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Los Angeles Film Festival
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2018
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Nomination Best Documentary Feature
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Los Angeles Film Festival
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2018
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Audience Award
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Kaliningrad International Film Festival "One the Edge: West"
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Home Sweet Home [da]
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2016
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Winner Best Short Documentary
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Danish Film Awards (Robert)
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2015
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Nomination in the Competition for Kids & Docs
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IDFA
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Dance For Me [cy; da]
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2015
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Nomination in the category 'Outstanding Arts and Culture Programming'
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Emmy Award
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2013
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Winner Audience Choice Award
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American Documentary Film Festival and Film Fund
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2012
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Nomination Sonic Dox Award
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CPH:DOX
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2012
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Nomination in the competition for First Appearance
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IDFA
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Book of Miri [cy; da]
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2014
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Nomination Best Documentary
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Ekko Shortlist Awards
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2010
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Winner President's Award
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Full Frame Documentary Film Festival
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2010
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Winner European Young CIVIS Media Prize
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CIVIS Media Prize
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2009
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Nomination for Best Student Award
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IDFA
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References
External links