Raúl daSilva

Raúl daSilva (born June 12, 1933) is an American filmmaker, writer and photoanimation specialist.[1] He produced the photoanimated film The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, an adaptation of Samuel Taylor Coleridge's poem, in 1975.

Raúl daSilva
Born (1933-06-12) June 12, 1933
Height6 ft (183 cm)
AwardsGold Medal, New York International Film and TV Festival
1975 The Rime of the Ancient Mariner

Gold Venus Award, Virgin Island International Film Festival
1975 The Rime of the Ancient Mariner

Golden Eagle, Cine Film Festival
1975 The Rime of the Ancient Mariner

Cindy Statuette, IFPA
1975 The Rime of the Ancient Mariner

Chris Statuette, Columbus International Film Festival
1975 The Rime of the Ancient Mariner

Certificate of Merit, Chicago International Film Festival
1975 The Rime of the Ancient Mariner

Biography

Raúl daSilva began his film career in 1965 at the Jam Handy Organization of Detroit, Michigan. Starting as a writer in the animation department, Raúl moved to live action and became a director of several hundred short films for clients such as General Motors, Merck & Co., Chevrolet, and The Boy Scouts of America. It was at this time that he became a producer-director of television commercials and director of public relation films.

daSilva has been an adjunct instructor on the script scenario at St. John Fisher College and a lecturer in screenwriting and directing at NYU, Rochester Institute of Technology, Brooklyn College, and Ithaca College. He met one of his mentors, TV pioneer writer Rod Serling at Ithaca College where they both lectured. Following that, he worked with Serling on film productions and when the celebrated playwright died at age 50, daSilva was asked to write Serling's eulogy by the Rochester Times Union. Serling had died in the O.R. of Rochester's Strong Memorial Hospital. His summer home was a boathouse on Cayuga Lake, near Ithaca. A re-write of the eulogy was published as "My Friend, Rod Serling, His Legacy" in the July/August 2008 issue of Fate Magazine.

With the urging by actor Sterling Hayden who had been a master of tall ships in his youth, daSilva released his critically acclaimed film adaptation of Samuel Taylor Coleridge's Rime of the Ancient Mariner in 1975. For the film, he used the technique of photoanimation, a technology that he learned at the Jam Handy Organization’s animation department. This allowed him to inexpensively bring to the screen the efforts of illustrators from the 19th and 20th centuries who sought to breathe life into the timeless epic poem by Samuel Taylor Coleridge. After some research he discovered that British actor Sir Michael Redgrave had once taught the epic poem as a schoolmaster. After contracting the actor daSilva flew to London to have Redgrave narrate the epic poem. With over two years in production, the film demonstrated the most complex work in existence today on the craft of photoanimation due to the mixed combination of movements and exposures between the vertical camera and the compass rose movements of the camera stand compound or platform where the graphic material is placed. With the craft becoming computer driven the complexity used at that time is no longer possible today, similarly, as stated by Pixar/Disney's creative genius, John Lasseter who has said that the subtle and complex character renderings of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs can not be done using a computer but must be rendered by hand.

The production was widely acclaimed by critics and recognized by six international film festival juries throughout the United States that awarded five first place prizes to the film. In this effort, Raúl renewed interest for this 1798 epic poem that speaks to the sanctity of all life on Earth.[2] The film has been distributed throughout North America since 1985 and was also broadcast in Australia.

In addition, daSilva has written magazine articles on spirituality and has presented lectures throughout New York City on the eternal spirit in the ephemeral human experience.

Raul daSilva currently resides in New Haven, Connecticut, where he writes freelance articles and fiction projects. He also writes website articles.[3]

Filmography

As director

  • Conflict and Resolution (1980)
  • Nat Hurst, MD, a 20th Century American Physician (1976) (TV)
  • Rime of the Ancient Mariner... aka The Strangest Voyage (USA: TV title)
  • Hidden Battlefield (1973)
  • No Whistles, Bells, or Bedlam (1973)
  • The Silent Drum (1973)
  • Craftsmen in Concert (1969)
  • Rochester, First Person Plural (1969)
  • Yesterday (1968)

As miscellaneous crew

  • Fear No Evil (1981) (creative consultant)
    ... aka Lucifer (Philippines: English title)
    ... aka Mark of the Beast
  • Standing Tall (1978) (TV) (script consultant)

As writer

  • Nat Hurst, MD, a 20th Century American Physician (1976) (TV) (written by)
  • Yesterday (1968) (writer)

As producer

  • No Whistles, Bells, or Bedlam (1973) (producer)
  • The Silent Drum (1973) (producer)

Books written

  • Man of Miracles, The Transcendent Ingo Swann,[4]
  • Ingo Swann, Revelations,[5]
  • My Mystical Life with Rod Serling: A Real Twilight Zone.,[6]
  • The Screenwriter's Life Saver: 17 pages of essential first aid tips for screenwriters, at every level, from beginner to master. [7]
  • The Seed" Fiction, graphic novel,[8]
  • The Corner Where Night Begins & 16 Other Stories, short story anthology, a salute to his late friend and co-worker, Rod Serling and the Twilight Zone genre

completed and currently with literary agency. The prologue to this book, "My Friend Rod Serling and His Legacy", is published in the July/August 2008 FATE Magazine.

  • Making Money in Film and Video: (1st and 2nd editions) Simon and Schuster, 1986 and Butterworth-Heinemann. 1992.
  • The World of Animation [Recipient 1st place, national Book Festival Award) Eastman Kodak, 1979
  • The Business of Filmmaking, Eastman Kodak, 1978
  • SOUND: Magnetic Recording for Motion Pictures, Eastman Kodak, 1977
  • The Motion Picture Production Manual, Eastman Kodak, 1972
  • In Flight Aerobics and Transitions Senuta Publishing Co. 1969.

See also

References

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