Michael Ondaatje

Michael Ondaatje

Born: October 12, 1943
in Colombo, Ceylon. [now Sri Lanka]
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Philip Michael Ondaatje (born September 12, 1943), OC, is a Sri Lankan-born Canadian novelist and poet of Colombo Chetty and Burgher origin. He is perhaps best known for his Booker Prize-winning novel, The English Patient, which was adapted into an Academy-Award-winning film.

Description above from the Wikipedia article Michael Ondaatje, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Movies for Michael Ondaatje...

Al Purdy Was Here
Title: Al Purdy Was Here
Character: (voice)
Released: October 9, 2015
Type: Movie
The story of Canada's leading poet and the A-Frame cabin he built. Now Canada's leading musicians and artists come together to tell the tale of Al Purdy.
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Bruce Cockburn Pacing the Cage
Title: Bruce Cockburn Pacing the Cage
Released: May 24, 2013
Type: Movie
An overview of the life and career of Canadian folk musician Bruce Cockburn.
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Edge Codes.com: The Art of Motion Picture Editing
Title: Edge Codes.com: The Art of Motion Picture Editing
Character: Self
Released: May 1, 2004
Type: Movie
Editing is more than just assembling shots in a certain order, it's an art form, and this documentary celebrates the craft and how it has grown and evolved through the history of the cinema. Edge Codes.com: The Art of Motion Picture Editing traces this story from the world of pioneering silent auteurs such as Georges Méliès and D.W. Griffith through the bold stylings of the masters of the French New Wave to the technical and creative innovations of films like The Matrix, Memento, and The Sixth Sense. Edge Codes.com includes interviews with noted directors George Lucas and Norman Jewison, as well as top editors Thelma Schoonmaker, Zach Staenberg, Dody Dorn, Andrew Mondshein, and many more.
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Shadow Maker: Gwendolyn MacEwen, Poet
Title: Shadow Maker: Gwendolyn MacEwen, Poet
Character: Himself
Released: May 5, 1999
Type: Movie
"Michael Ondaatje called Gwendolyn MacEwen 'the last of the bardic poets'. In the early 60s, she astonished the nascent beat scene at Toronto's Bohemian Embassy with her exotic looks and her accomplished writing style. During her lifetime MacEwen travelled to Greece and Egpyt, married twice, wrote novels, translated Greek verse, took lovers and wrote radio scripts. Above all, she wrote luminous poetry, some of which is sensitively visualized in this thoughtful, pensive work which features insights from Margaret Atwood, Judith Merrill and Rosemary Sullivan." -- Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival
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Poetry in Motion
Title: Poetry in Motion
Released: September 17, 1982
Type: Movie
More than 20 contemporary North American poets recite, sing, and perform their work. Early in the film, Charles Bukowski talks about the energy of poets and of a poem. These poets are the children of Walt Whitman and of Charles Olson, incantatory and oratorical, radical, sometimes incorporating contemporary political imagery. Black Mountain poets, the Beats, minimalists like John Cage, the wordless Four Horsemen, Tom Waits, and others capture aspects of poets as troubadours.