- Richard Heslop
Richard Heslop is a British director of
music video s and films. He has produced videos for artists including Queen andNew Order , as well as programs onChannel 4 and theBBC .Biography
Before becoming a director, Heslop operated a live multi-projection for
23 Skidoo on their travels throughEurope in 1979. In 1981 he documented theBrixton riots and began a foundation course at theLondon College of Printing . There, he released his "7 Songs" video (1983). He graduated in 1984 from St. Martins with a BA and honours with the degree-film (in cooperation withDaniel Landin ) "The Child and the Saw:". In the film, a nine year old girl receives a giantbandsaw for her birthday and plays innocently and gleefully as it twists around her bedroom. The film won first prize at the Spanish short film festival.Heslop became known for his manipulation of film speeds that gave his images an alternative edge and unique feel and an alternate perspective of reality. In 1984, he was camera operator for
Derek Jarman 'sexperimental film "Imagining October," filmed on super 8 mm. Two years later he directed his first music video "The Queen is Dead" byThe Smiths and modeled in aParis fashion show forYohji Yamamoto . In 1986 he made the film "Procar" (16 mm, black and white, 19 mins.) in collaboration with Daniel Landin andHerbert Verhey with his "Car Ensemble of the Netherlands " ("Nederlands Auto Ensemble") for live performances in Amsterdam during theRomantic Aesthetics Festival . For this project, a two-day drive-in cinema was built in the centre of the city. The film was shown later that year at theBerlin Film Festival . The same year, he filmed with Daniel Landin the performance ofLaibach andMichael Clark inLondon : "No Fire Escape In Hell" (1986) and filmed on locations inSlovenia the music video for Laibach's "Life is Life" (16 mm, released in 1987).In the late nineteen-eighties he started to create photo-montages that were exhibited in The London Gallery. He also continued his career as director of music videos, including clips for New Order,
Pop Will Eat Itself andThe Mighty Lemon Drops . During the same period he started "Trigger Happy Films" (that would produce the video for "Unbelievable" byEMF ) and apart from beginning to document therave scene in England he became cameraman on Derek Jarman's arthouse feature film "The Garden" (1990). For Channel 4, he directed in 1991 "Floating," a 39 min. movie about a Docklands bus driver on the verge of a nervous breakdown, starting to have visions of a second "Great Flood" who finally destroys his house in order to build an ark. This film was chosen in 1992 as the best short film in the "Semaine de la Critique" at theCannes Film Festival .Richard Heslop joined "Oil Factory Films" the same year, a London-based production company for music videos and commercials. In 1997 he directed of the music video "I Was Born to Love You" by Queen. After having directed dozens of music videos, he left "Oil Factory Films" and began to produce and direct films for the BBC and Channel 4, as well as TV series such as "Residents," a black comedy, as an 8 x 30 min. part TV series (2000) and "State of the Party," a contemporary drama set in and about the dance culture scene, with music by
Jamiroquai ,Air andNeneh Cherry .ee also
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Scratch Video
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