Jennifer Reeves

Jennifer Reeves

January 1, 1971 — Sri Lanka

Jennifer Reeves (b. 1971, Sri Lanka) is a New York-based filmmaker working primarily on 16mm film. Reeves was named one of the “Best 50 Filmmakers Under 50” in the film journal Cinema Scope in the spring of 2012. Reeves has made experimental films since 1990. She does her own writing, cinematography, editing, and sound design. Her subjective and personal films push the boundaries of film through optical-printing and direct-on-film techniques. Reeves has consistently explored themes of memory, mental health and recovery, feminism and sexuality, landscape, wildlife, and politics from many different angles. Reeves has also made a number of experimental narratives, most notably her highly acclaimed feature THE TIME WE KILLED. The Village Voice Film Critic’s poll (2005) honored THE TIME WE KILLED with votes from six film critics for categories including: Best Film, Best Cinematography, and Best Performance.

Trains Are for Dreaming

2009

The Time We Killed

2004

Light Work I

Light Work I

2007

Fear of Blushing

Fear of Blushing

2001

Monsters in the Closet

1994

When It Was Blue

When It Was Blue

2008

The Girl's Nervy.

1995

Pigment-Dispersion Syndrome

Pigment-Dispersion Syndrome

2022