Kurt Kuenne

Filmmaker

Birthday October 24, 1973

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Mountain View, California

Age 50 years old

Nationality United States

#36226 Most Popular

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Kurt Kuenne is an American filmmaker and composer.

He has directed a number of short and feature films, including Rent-a-Person, the YouTube film Validation, described as "a romantic epic in miniature", and the documentary Dear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About His Father.

1973

Kuenne was born October 24, 1973, in Mountain View, California He grew up in Northern California and began making films aged seven on Super 8 film and later video.

1995

He attended Lynbrook High School and then studied film at University of Southern California's School of Cinema-Television, where he made Remembrances (1995) and was awarded the Harold Lloyd Scholarship in Film Editing.

1999

Kuenne then studied film composing, but returned to directing with feature Scrapbook (1999).

2002

In 2002 he was awarded an Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Nicholl Fellowship in Screenwriting for a script titled Mason Mule.

2007

Validation (2007), written, directed, and scored by Kuenne, was distributed through Gay Hendricks's Spiritual Cinema Circle and is a short film about a parking attendant (played by T. J. Thyne) who dispenses compliments to his customers.

It won Best Short Grand Prize at the 2007 Heartland Film Festival, and The Independent Critic rated it A+.

It has received more than 10 million YouTube views.

2008

Kuenne's documentary Dear Zachary (2008), about the murder of his childhood friend Andrew Bagby, was received as a documentary that "will rip you apart inside and pour your guts out through your tear ducts".

Kuenne produced, directed, and scored the movie by himself.

The only financial help given were donations to expand the YouTube short film into a full length feature.

2011

His latest feature film Shuffle (2011) again stars T. J. Thyne, playing a man who finds his life running out of sequence.

2017

It won the Jury Award for Best Feature at the 17th Stony Brook Film Festival.