Peter Lynch (director)

Peter Lynch is a Canadian filmmaker, most noted as the director and writer of the documentary films Project Grizzly, The Herd and Cyberman.

Career edit

Lynch's 1994 short film Arrowhead, starring Don McKellar, won the Genie Award for Best Theatrical Short Film at the 15th Genie Awards.[1]

His feature debut, Project Grizzly, premiered at the 1996 Toronto International Film Festival,[2] and was a Genie Award nominee for Best Feature Length Documentary at the 17th Genie Awards.[3]

The Herd, about the six-year Canadian Reindeer Drive of the 1930s from Alaska to the Northwest Territories, premiered at the 1998 Toronto International Film Festival,[4] and was a Genie Award nominee for Best Feature Length Documentary at the 19th Genie Awards.[5]

Cyberman, about technology activist and University of Toronto professor Steve Mann, was released in 2001.[6] A Whale of a Tale, about Lynch's quest to discover the origin of a whale bone unearthed in downtown Toronto, followed in 2004.[7]

In 2009 Lynch directed four short films for the cross-platform project City Sonic.[8] Lynch, along with six other directors, shot 20 short films about Toronto musicians and the places where their musical lives were transformed. Lynch directed films starting The Barenaked Ladies, Jason Collett, Lioness, and Laura Barrett.

In 2011, he participated in the National Parks Project, collaborating with Barrett, Cadence Weapon and Mark Hamilton to produce and score a short film about Alberta's Waterton Lakes National Park.[9]

Lynch's first dramatic feature film, Birdland, was released theatrically in Canada in January 2018.[10]

Filmography edit

  • Chinese Concoctions Not Good for TV
  • Toronto Symphony Orchestra making-of process (1992)
  • St Bruno, My Eyes As a Stranger (1994)
  • Arrowhead (1994)
  • The Artist and the Collector (1994)
  • Project Grizzly (1996)
  • The Herd (1998)
  • Cyberman (2001)
  • Soccer Fever—A Passion Play (2002)
  • Animal Nightmares (2003)
  • A Whale of a Tale (2004)
  • Dem Bones (2004)
  • Bloodlines (2004)
  • Things that Move—Helicopters
  • Habbakuk Ship of Ice (2006)
  • Who Shot General Wolfe (2007)
  • The Archivist's Handbook (2007)[11]
  • The Robotic Chair (2007)
  • A Short Film about Falling (2007)
  • Three Chords from the Truth (2008)
  • Trend Hunter TV (2008)
  • City Sonic (2009)
  • Love Is A Dirty Word (2010)
  • Birdland (2018)

References edit

  1. ^ "It's Atom Egoyan's night at Genies; Toronto film-maker takes eight awards with offbeat Exotica". Montreal Gazette, December 8, 1994.
  2. ^ Pevere, Geoff (September 4, 1996). "Canadian Quixote tilts at grizzlies". The Globe and Mail.
  3. ^ "Over-the-edge Canadian films poised for Genie nod". Canadian Press, November 24, 1996.
  4. ^ Tom McSorley, "The Herd: Peter Lynch and the secret history of Canada". Take One, Fall 1998.
  5. ^ "Who'll win the Genie awards?". The Province, December 8, 1998.
  6. ^ Ken Eisner, "Cyberman". Variety, November 9, 2001.
  7. ^ "Old whalebone prompts bizarre quest". Guelph Mercury, September 16, 2004.
  8. ^ Jennie Punter, "This time, it really is 'all about the fans'". The Globe and Mail, June 19, 2009.
  9. ^ Gayle MacDonald (May 15, 2011). "The Monday Q&A: Film director Peter Lynch". The Globe and Mail.
  10. ^ Randall King, "Toronto-based 'erotic thriller' more tofu than titillating". Winnipeg Free Press, April 28, 2018.
  11. ^ Peter Goddard (March 17, 2007). "The man who wasn't there". Toronto Star.

External links edit