Sarah Gavron (born 20 April 1970) is a British film director. She has directed four short films, and three feature films.Garcia, Maria. "Demanding To Be Heard". Film Journal International. 118. Her first film was This Little Life (2003), later followed by Brick Lane (2007) and Village at the End of the World (2012). Her film, Suffragette (2015) is based in the London of 1912 and tells the story of the Suffragette movement based on realistic historical events.Gwen Seabourne. (2016) Deeds, Words and Drama: A Review of the Film Suffragette (2015). Feminist Legal Studies 24:1, pages 115-119. Her most recent film is Rocks (2019) which she directed in a creative collaboration with the team and young cast.
Gavron is married to cinematographer David Katznelson, and together, they have two children. Gavron has said she "got into filmmaking to make a difference."Puchko, Kristy (2015-10-22). IndieWire. She has dedicated her career to telling the stories of women. In addition, the scarcity of women filmmakers in the UK is what inspires Gavron with her own filmmaking, and her responsibility as a female director.
Her first film, This Little Life (2003), is classified as a television drama, with the plot surrounding a couple and their premature born child; Brick Lane (2007) is her second most recognized feature film, that is an adaptation of Monica Ali's novel of the same name,Murray, J. (2008, Summer). Brick lane. Cineaste, 33, 52-54 which encapsulates the life of a Bangladeshi, female immigrant living in London, U.K; Village at the End of the World (2012) is a documentary that Gavron directed in a peninsula in Greenland. Her next film, Suffragette (2015), is set in London of 1912 and tells the story of the Suffragette movement, specifically, the lives of three women that take on fictitious names in the film, however represent non-fictional historical figures.
In Brick Lane (2007), Gavron centers on the female protagonist in "one of the most ethnically diverse neighborhoods in the United Kingdom."
Suffragette (2015) is "this first major feature film to focus on the fight for women's suffrage”. The film conveys important themes regarding legal and social positions of women, wives and mothers in 1912. Gavron believes that the women's suffrage movement must be regarded as a "multi stranded, and complex story that is still unfolding." Gavron intended Suffragette to be telling of important moments in the past, but also relevant in present day. Suffragette was acquired by Focus Features (originally Relativity Media) in March 2015. The film premiered at the 2015 Telluride Film Festival.
Her most recent film, Rocks, premiered at the 2019 Toronto International Film Festival in the Platform Prize program.Jeremy Kay, "Sarah Gavron's 'Rocks' to open TIFF Platform". Screen Daily, 7 August 2019.
Gavron's selections were:
Short films
Television films
| 2003 | British Independent Film Awards | Douglas Hickox Award | This Little Life | ||
| BAFTA TV Awards | Best Single Drama | ||||
| 2004 | Best New Director (Fiction) | ||||
| 2007 | British Independent Film Awards | Best Director | Brick Lane | ||
| BFI London Film Festival | Alfred Dunhill UK Film Talent Award | ||||
| San Sebastián International Film Festival | C.I.C.A.E. Award | ||||
| 2008 | BAFTA Film Awards | Carl Foreman Award for Special Achievement by a British Director | |||
| London Critics Circle Film Awards | British Breakthrough - Filmmaking | ||||
| 2015 | Alliance of Women Film Journalists | EDA Female Focus Award - Best Woman Director | Suffragette | ||
| Camerimage | Golden Frog - Main Competition | ||||
| Hamptons International Film Festival | Tangerine Entertainment Juice Award | ||||
| Mill Valley Film Festival | Audience Award - Mind the Gap | ||||
| Women Film Critics Circle | Courage in Filmmaking Award | ||||
| Best Movie by a Woman | |||||
| Women's Image Network Awards | Outstanding Feature Film | ||||
| 2016 | Empire Awards | Best British Film | |||
| Athena Film Festival | Ensemble Award | ||||
| European Film Awards | Best Production Designer | ||||
| Turia Awards, Spain | Audience Award - Best Foreign Film | ||||
| WFTV Awards | Deluxe Director Award | Herself | |||
| 2021 | BAFTA Film Awards | Best Director | Rocks | ||
| British Independent Film Awards | Best British Independent Film | ||||
| Best Director |
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