Adam Barker-Mill

Películas

Every Picture Tells a Story
Director of Photography
James Scott's biopic of his father William Scott, his childhood and his origins as a painter.
A Shocking Accident
Director of Photography
A Shocking Accident is a 1982 British short comedy film directed by James Scott, based on Graham Greene's short story by the same name. About a boy whose father is killed in Naples, when a pig falls on him as a balcony collapses. The incident haunts the boy through his later life until he meets a girl who understands his side of the story. The film won an Oscar at the 55th Academy Awards for Best Live Action Short and was nominated for BAFTA in 1983.
Hero
Director of Photography
Medieval fable of sorcery and witchcraft in a remote corner of the Scottish highlands.
The Great Rock 'n' Roll Swindle
Director of Photography
Es un documental de ficción (un falso documental), trata sobre la banda de punk rock británica Sex Pistols. La película cuenta una versión estilizada y ficticia de la formación, fama y ruptura de la banda, desde el punto de vista del mánager Malcolm McLaren.
Chance, History, Art...
Director of Photography
Anne Bean, John McKeon, Stuart Brisley, Rita Donagh, Jamie Reid and Jimmy Boyle are interviewed about their artistic practice and the legacy of Surrealism on their work.
The Great Ice-Cream Robbery
Director of Photography
Two screens of film about - and sometimes shot by - Claes Oldenburg, detailing his inspiration, his methods and his relationship with his partner Hannah Wilke.
Private Road
Director of Photography
Receptionist Anne’s new relationship with nascent writer Peter is opening her eyes to a new lifestyle, one far removed from her comfortable middle-class background.
Bronco Bullfrog
Director of Photography
Del and his friends agree to take part in a robbery with a boy fresh from the borstal. When Del falls in love with Irene they decide to run away from their nagging parents - and the law.
Love's Presentation
Cinematography
'Love's Presentation' may be a time capsule of a rising art-world star, but it also pokes fun at the perspective of a celebrity profile. In its opening sequence, an antsy-looking Hockney squirms as a narrator reads aloud critic Jasia Reichardt’s introduction to his star persona. Scott’s portrait of Hockney is more expansive, spurning the growing popular image of the artist in favor of following him at work; He’s described the film as a “how-to” documentary. Filmed in April '66 in Hockney’s ground-floor apartment and studio, Hockney himself improvised the narration while watching the film. We watch the artist carve delicate lines into the plates, submerge them in an acid bath outside his window, then wipe his hands on the window curtains... A rare, relaxed close-up on Hockney’s creative process.
R.B. Kitaj
Director of Photography
Biographical short about the American Pop Artist by James Scott
R.B. Kitaj
Editor
Biographical short about the American Pop Artist by James Scott