Jamie Travis
Nascimento : 1979-08-13, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
História
Jamie Travis is a Canadian filmmaker who has directed award-winning films, music videos and television commercials. He received international recognition for his two short film trilogies: The Patterns Trilogy and the Saddest Children in the World trilogy. His six shorts, all of which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival, have drawn comparisons to filmmakers such as David Lynch, Todd Solondz, Peter Greenaway and Wes Anderson. Travis' first feature film For a Good Time, Call... was released by Focus Features in 2012 after debuting at the Sundance Film Festival.
Travis has directed music videos for renowned Canadian indie artists Tegan and Sara and crafted characteristically stylish television commercials for prominent brands and organizations.
MTV's comedy series Faking It marks Travis' debut as a television director.
Writer
Allison Pyke is a young angel who's trying to get her ticket into heaven. Complications arise when two important men in her life unexpectedly show up to form a love triangle.
Director
Allison Pyke is a young angel who's trying to get her ticket into heaven. Complications arise when two important men in her life unexpectedly show up to form a love triangle.
Director
A couple faces unexpected parenting challenges when the father becomes a stay-at-home dad decides to home school their kids.
Director
A bem-sucedida Lauren subitamente fica sozinha, depois que seu namorado termina com ela. A bagunceira Katie está a ponto de perder o apartamento de seus sonhos, se não encontrar uma pessoa para dividir as despesas. Elas relutantemente resolvem morar juntas, mesmo não tendo nada em comum, até que Lauren descobre que Katie está trabalhando com telessexo e decide entrar nesse bom negócio. Mas à medida que essa parceria começa a dar dinheiro, sua recente amizade enfrenta inesperados desafios que podem deixá-la por um fio.
Writer
A young couple sings from their apartment windows about the unshared bagel that ended their relationship. Part of the Seven Sins film project.
Director
A young couple sings from their apartment windows about the unshared bagel that ended their relationship. Part of the Seven Sins film project.
Director
In an increasingly urban nation, Canada’s national parks are a treasured escape into extraordinary beauty and rugged wilderness. If the Group of Seven were an introduction to the landscape’s majesty, National Parks Project is the next logical chapter. Fifty-two contemporary artists from across the country, whose talents are as diverse as the parks they set out to explore, used their surroundings as a source of inspiration to blend musical and cinematic skills into collaboratively crafted vignettes. Epic in its ambition to celebrate these locales during Parks Canada’s centennial year, this omnibus film resonates with the knowledge that our unprotected land is more vulnerable than ever. Including films by Zacharius Kunuk, Peter Lynch, Sturla Gunnarsson and John Walker, and music by Sarah Harmer, Sam Roberts, Cadence Weapon and The Besnard Lakes, among many others, National Parks Project is a one-of-a-kind documentary experience.
Writer
After a game of hide-and-seek, 11-year-old Aaron is hypnotized to solve the mystery of his missing friend.
Director
After a game of hide-and-seek, 11-year-old Aaron is hypnotized to solve the mystery of his missing friend.
Director
The third film in Jamie Travis’ PATTERNS trilogy.
Producer
Timothy Higgins, the saddest boy in the world, prepares to hang himself at his ninth birthday party.
Screenplay
Timothy Higgins, the saddest boy in the world, prepares to hang himself at his ninth birthday party.
Director
Timothy Higgins, the saddest boy in the world, prepares to hang himself at his ninth birthday party.
Director
Stop motion telekinesis is just the beginning. Though riddled with familiar motifs (nods to Bernard Herrmann’s scores, Stanley Kubrick's unnerving spaces, the mesmerizing portraits of women in VERTIGO and LAURA), the second film in Jamie Travis’ PATTERNS trilogy achieves a singular blend of horror, melodrama and musical. This installment centers on Michael, a nervous guy puzzling over an unexpected Chinese takeout order. Even as some of the mysteries from the first PATTERNS are revealed, the trilogy plunges deeper into a quicksand of shared dreams, hidden anxieties and romantic yearning.
Director
The first film in Jamie Travis’s PATTERNS trilogy suggests a surrealist homage to the psychologically charged set designs of auteurs like Alfred Hitchcock and Douglas Sirk. The premise is simplicity itself: a woman waits for a call in her immaculate apartment. Comfortably immersed in her bath, she reveals a strange dream to the caller. Travis’s calibrated formal manipulations work up a terrific surface suspense.
Director
Three seven year-olds endure the culinary abuses of their mother. When Mother's aversion to brown eggs gets out of hand, young Chester, Eliza and Godfrey take a stand.