My first attempt:
My first films:
Domino Play
Plasticine
Competition Without Winners
The Large Labyrinth
The Last Leaf
Rom and Jul
Let me Live
White
My first attempt:
My first films:
Domino Play
Plasticine
Competition Without Winners
The Large Labyrinth
The Last Leaf
Rom and Jul
Let me Live
White
I already wanted to become a filmmaker when I was 15.
With 17, I started my first attempt at making a live-action short film. The action took place at school. Brother and friends were the film crew, teachers and classmates the actors and extras. We shot at the weekends.
My team shrank from weekend to weekend. The weather was changeable. Sometimes it was sunny, sometimes it rained. We didn’t have enough light. After two weeks, the developed film material came from the lab. It was partly out of focus.
Disappointed, I gave up on the project and changed my plan.
I retreated to my children’s room, painted science fiction pictures or went to the hobby cellar, tinkered with something. I kept dreaming about film.
Equipped with only two film lamps and a miniature film set made of dominoes, I started experimenting with film tricks, or more precisely with animation, in the basement. That was in 1982.
One of my favourite pieces of electronic music inspired me to make the fancy 5-minutes film PLASTICINE in 1983.
All objects and figures in the film are made of plasticine. The main character, a conductor, bewitches his surroundings. Objects roll, dance, appear and disappear or change colours according to the music.
The film was made for a competition of non-professional filmmakers with the subject ‘My best Thing’. The Bavarian broadcasting TV, the initiator, didn’t select PLASTICINE.
I got the following awards:
Gold Medal at the 5th Bavarian Film Festival of the non-professional filmmakers 1984, Straubing
Silver Medal at the German national competition of non-professional animation films 1984, Ulm
I love car racing films. COMPETITION WITHOUT WINNERS is a film like that, a 12-minutes stop motion film, produced in 1984.
The story: At midnight Matchbox cars come alive to race.
I got the following awards:
2nd Prize and Special Prize for the best soundtrack at the Bavarian federal state competition for amateur filmmakers in Landshut, Germany, in 1984.
Bronze Medal at the German national competition of non-professional animation films 1984, Ulm.
The 5-minutes animated film THE LARGE LABYRINTH is a mix of live action and stop motion, produced in 1984.
The story is about the dream of a little girl, in which plasticine characters, come alive.
I made THE BIG LABYRINTH again for the amateur film competition of The Bavarian broadcasting TV. Unlike PLASTICINE the year before THE LARGE LABYRINTH was selected with 29 others from 300 submissions. The audience, who was the jury, chose my film as Best Film of the Competition. The Bavarian TV broadcasted a 30-minutes report about me and my films.
The film got the following awards:
Best Cartoon and 3rd Prize at the Cork Youth International Video & Film Festival 1988, Crawford/England
Special Prize for the “special cinematic design of a youth problem” at the Bavarian non-professional Film Festival, Ansbach, 1985.
Advancement Award at the Film Days of Bavarian schools, Marktheidenfeld, 1986
Silver Medal at the German National Competition for Film Amateurs in 1985, Ulm
Honorable Mention at the Festival OSMICKA 1987 / CSSR
Special Commendation for Second Best Animated Film at CIAFF, FCIFA Amateur Film Festival 1986, Canada
1st Prize and Special Prize for a special cartoon, 5th International Film Competition, Lindau, 1985
Diploma d’Honneur, Quatrieme Biennale Internationale du Cinema Humain “Marcel Mignon”, France, 1986
Advancement Award, Workshop for Young Filmmakers, Wiesbaden Naurod, 1986
Certificat of participation at the UNICA, Union Internationale Du Cinema et Video non-Professional, Concours de Tallinn 1986
The topic of climate change has inspired me to make the 6-minutes film THE LAST LEAF in 1984.
The story: A plasticine figure lives in a dead grey forest and takes care of a leftover green leaf.
In 1985 I was invited to the World Amateur Film Festival (UNICA) in Argentina. The film won the prize for the best film in the youth category.
The film received the following awards:
1. Prize at the regional Amateur Film Competition Lower Bavaria, 1985, Tittling
Bavarian Lion at the 6th Bavarian Amateur Film Festival, 1985, Ansbach
Best Film of a Youth at the 34. German competition of non-professional films 1985, Gütersloh
Best Film of the festival and Gold Medal, German national competition of non-professional animation films 1985, Ulm
Honorable Mention and Special Prize for a good cinematic design on a humanistic topic, 3. International Juvenale, Klagenfurt, Austria, 1985
IAC International Award and IAC Youth Trophy, International Film and Video Competition 1987, London
Miniature Golden Knight for best animation film, 27. Golden Knight Film Festival 1988, Malta
Advancement Award andPrize of the Audience at the Film Days of Bavarian schools in Marktheidenfeld, 1985
Excerpts were broadcasted by the German TV: Bavarian and Hessian TV and ZDF/ Today’s Journal, a television news magazine broadcast
My particular interest in the 14-minute stop-motion film ROM AND JUL was in the design of the scenery, the lighting and the music that was composed for this film.
The idea was inspired by Shakespeare’s ‘Romeo and Juliet’. The rival families are LEGO bricks and Fischer-Technik blocks.
The film got a Prize for Best Sound Editing at the local competition of non-professional film makers, Lower Bavaria, Straubing, 1985.
My 6-minutes stop motion film LET ME LIVE was the thesis in Art at my A-levels (Abitur) in Art in 1986. I received a grade 1 with distinction.
The story: A little bird hatches from an egg in a garbage dump and tries to survive.
The film received the following awards:
Award of the Czech Council of Peace for a foreign film, Rychnover Achters 1988, CSSR
Prize for best film and a Special Award for a remarkable animated film, 4th International Juvenale 1987, Klagenfurt, Austria
Challenge Trophy and 1st Prize, regional competition for film amateurs in Lower Bavaria, Straubing, 1986
Bavarian Lion and audience favourite at the Bavarian Amateur Film Festival, Königsbrunn, 1986
Gold Medal and Special Prize (prize money) at the German National Animation Film Competition for film amateurs, Ulm, 1986
Advancement Award and audience favourite, 9th Days of School Films, Marktheidenfeld, 1986
Promotional Award and audience favourite, at the workshop for young filmmakers, Wiesbaden Naurod, 1987
Silver Medal and Special Prize: “Man and his Environment” at the amateur film festival, Duisburg 1986
Excerpts were broadcasted by German TV WDR, edited by ‘aktuelle Stunde’ an infotainment magazine.
I made the 11-minutes stop motion film WHITE in 1987.
In 1988 I successfully applied with this film to study animation at the Kassel College of Art.
The story is set in a fantastic white world and is about the relationship between two ghosts. They live alone in this world. One ghost is sad, while the other tries to be in a good mood. An unfortunate accident suddenly brings colour into play.
I bought a Bolex camera, an analogue editing table and a 16mm projector to produce the film with professional technical equipment. I purchased a sound system that synchronized a four-track tape machine, a Super-8 film viewer and a 16mm-projector. The music was composed by Thomas Andretzky.
The film received the following awards:
Bronze Medal in the category Juenesse, Union Internationale Du Cinema Non Professionel UNICA, Zagrep, 1987
Best Film, Regional Competition of Film Amateurs Passau, 1987
Bavarian Lion, Bavarian Amateur Film Festival, competition, Gunzenhausen, 1988
Gold Medal, National Animation Film Competition for Film Amateurs, Ulm, 1988
Special Prize for a Remarkable Work, German Amateur Film Competition (DAFF), 1988
Commendation, Wilhelmshaven, 1989
Best Film of the group up to 26 years, International Youth Festival for Film and Video Amateurs, Klagenfurt, 1989
Bronze Medal, Animated Film Festival Bielsko – Biala / Poland
Advancement Award, Workshop for Young Filmmakers, Wiesbaden Naurod, 1988
Excerpts of the film were broadcasted by the German TV stations: ZDF, South German broadcastingTV, RTL
Please contact me if you have any questions or would like to book this film:
5 to 14 minutes
Thomas Stellmach
Thomas Stellmach, Germany, 1982 - 1987
8 stop motion films