Jeanie Finlay is one of Britain’s most distinctive documentary makers. She creates award-winning work for cinema and television, telling intimate stories to international audiences.
Her latest film Your Fat Friend had its world premiere at Tribeca Film Festival, followed by its international premiere at Sheffield Doc Fest, where it won the audience award, followed by a pioneering, creative distribution path to audiences around the world.
She has made films for HBO, IFC, BBC as well as four commissions for the acclaimed BBC Storyville strand, including BIFA nominated The Great Hip Hop Hoax and BIFA winning Orion:The Man Who Would Be King
Whether inviting audiences to share the (extra)ordinary journey of a British transgender man, pregnant with his child (BIFA nominated Seahorse), behind the scenes of Teesside’s last record shop in her home town (SOUND IT OUT), or onto the set of the world’s biggest television show (Emmy nominated Game Of Thrones: The Last Watch), all of Jeanie's films are all made with the same steel and heart, sharing an empathetic approach to bringing overlooked and untold stories to the screen.
She is currently making her tenth feature film in the north east of England, where she grew up, co producing with Charlie Phillips, supported by BFI Doc Society, IDA and Bertha Foundation.
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Her work includes: Your Fat Friend (96 mins, Premiere – Tribeca, Field of Vision and BFI Doc Society), Emmy nominated Game Of Thrones: The Last watch (115 mins HBO), BIFA nominated & Cinema Eye Honours ‘Unforgettable’ winning Seahorse (89 mins, Premiere – Tribeca, BBC2, VPRO, Criterion Channel ), BIFA, Nashville and In Edit winner ORION: The Man Who Would Be King (87 mins, World Premiere – Tribeca, BBC Storyville, Creative England, Ffilm Cymru Wales and Broadway. Distributed by IFC & Sundance Selects). The project was awarded a Future documentary innovation award from React Lab to create a wraparound artwork – I am Orion. Indietracks (29 mins Shine a Light, Esmé Fairbairn) Panto! (71 mins) a co production with Met Film Production for BBC Storyville, BIFA & Grierson nominated The Great Hip Hop Hoax (88 mins, World Premiere – SXSW) for BBC Scotland & BBC Storyville, Sound It Out (75 mins, World Premiere – SXSW, winner - Cinema Versa ) The official film of Record Store Day, Goth Cruise (USA, 75 min) for the Independent Film Channel which became the most downloaded title ever on IFC, critically acclaimed doc Teenland (BBC4 60 min) and Canon award winning interactive documentary Home-Maker.
In 2023 she was the recipient of a prestigious Chicken & Egg award. The program recognizes and elevates eight female and marginalised gender directors at advanced stages of their careers with unique voices, who are poised to reach new heights and become strong filmmaker-advocates for urgent issues. The award consists of a $75,000 grant and a year-long mentorship tailored to each filmmaker’s individual goals.
Her films have been showcased in retrospectives on: Criterion Channel 2023, People Person - Documentaries by Jeanie Finlay curated by Ashley Clark. By Museum of Moving Image, NYC 2020, curated by Eric Hynes - People Everyday: The Films of Jeanie Finlay and by True Story, UK 2021, curated by Chris Harris - All that Glimmers - The Films of Jeanie Finlay. Her films are held in the archive at the British Film Institute and are featured on the BFI Player as part of The Camera is Ours: Britain's Women Documentary Makers. She wrote about UK filmmaker Kay Mander for the related DVD box set.
Jeanie was awarded an honorary Doctorate of Arts by her alma mater Nottingham Trent University in 2021 in recognition of her contribution to filmmaking. She studied BA Contemporary Arts - Visual Arts & Music there in the 1990s. Named an Inspiration award winner by Sheffield Doc/ Fest as someone who has been an inspiration to filmmakers and audiences around the world to engage in documentary and a “Star of Tomorrow” in Screen International’s prestigious yearly review of new filmmakers.
Jeanie had her first film commissioned when she was 6 months pregnant and being a parent has always informed her filmmaking. She has been a vocal supporter and mentor for Raising Films, which advocates for parents working in the media industry and for Film In Mind which advocates for mental health support in film.
She is currently on the nomination committee for BIFA, is co-chair of the documentary subgroup and was part of the BAFTA Breakthrough jury - identifying emerging UK talent. She has served on juries for many film festivals including BFI London Film Festival, Aesthetica, Sheffield Doc Fest, Hotdocs, Open City Docs and Big Sky Documentary Film festival.
Jeanie speaks publicly about filmmaking all over the world, has written for The Talkhouse, Directors Notes, The Quietus and Sight & Sound and was a director of Nottingham’s flagship cinema & media centre, Broadway for many years. She has mentored many filmmakers on their journeys, both independently and through organisations including NI Screen, WFTV and Raising Films.
In 2008 she founded Glimmer Films to develop and deliver ambitious, engaging and intimate documentary works, made in the region for international audiences. Glimmer strive for gender equity in front of and behind the camera, with all recent films made by a predominantly (over 70%) female and marginalised gender team.
Glimmer Films aim to: Creatively challenge the form of documentary. Celebrate the untold stories of people far from the spotlight. Further explore “wraparound filmmaking” *; continuing a groundbreaking practice of engaging with audiences in innovative and meaningful ways throughout production, distribution and beyond. Glimmer was named by Creative England and The Telegraph as one of the 50 most creative companies in England.
* a phrase coined by Dr Judith Aston to describe Glimmer’s pioneering approach to creative distribution
Jeanie is a member of the Academy (AMPAS) - Documentary Branch
A member of BAFTA
Chair of the Documentary Subgroup - BIFA
FAQ
How did you get into filmmaking?
I didn't study film and picked up a camera when I realised that the conversations I had while photographing people could be "the work". The resulting artwork was Home-Maker, an interactive documentary made in the living rooms of older people who were housebound.
I made one short film (Love Takes) and then my first film Teenland (60 mins), was commissioned by The BBC when I was 6 months pregnant. I showed the film in a cinema and when I felt the live audience reaction, I knew that I had found what I wanted to do for the rest of my life.
Which film school did you go to?
I went to a comprehensive school in the North East, studied art at Cleveland College of Art and Design and studied Contemporary Arts (music and art) at Nottingham Trent University. I was the first person in my family to pursue arts as a career and the first to go to university, closely followed by my sister Claire who is now a costume designer for film and television.
What advice would you offer other filmmakers that you wish you had known when starting out?
Follow your gut instinct - if you are fascinated by a story, then it's likely that audiences will also connect with it.
Don't believe the London myth - You can live outside of London and make films for an international audience.
True intimacy trumps fancy cinematography any day of the week, so value access and proximity over sliders, drones and expensive cameras. Don't be afraid to talk to people and start to make your film.
Build relationships with funders, advocates and financiers. We are living in tough funding times and with that comes huge aversion for risk. I wish there was an easy answer to this - I'm in it too! How can you alleviate the risk in getting your film commissioned and made? Can you get it down on paper and tell the stor there - it will help if you can.
What’s your process when making films?
I only make films about subjects that I am deeply interested in, posessed by and can't stop thinking about. I spend a lot of time listening and I never write questions down. When I was at art school I thought a lot about "The medium is the message", a phrase coined by Marshall McLuhan. When I start making a new film, the form evolves through the filming. I almost see the visuals out of the corner of my eye. I also always work with amazing people who can help realise this goal.
I don't have a lot of time for show-offs, in front of or behind the camera. I’m not especially interested in lairy people who have told their story many, many times, I’m interested in shy people who might not have told their story before and will allow us to discover the truth in the moment, together.
Which filmmakers or films have most inspired your work?
I love going to the cinema and feeling open to the emotion onscreen - for me, there is a peculiar pleasure in crying in the dark, surrounded my strangers.
My favourite living filmmaker is Hirozaku Koreeda (Shoplifters / After Life). I look forward to his films so much and savour every moment. He always follows the emotion in his stories.
I love Kim Longinotto (Dreamcatcher) and Carole Salter's (Almost Heaven) films, they make hugely powerful, intimate documentaries with a tiny crew. They're astonishing. I think about Chris Smith's film; American Movie and the profoundly human work of Agnes Varda a lot.
I'm also a huge fan of maximalist, ultra designed cinema - Max Ophuls (Lola Montes) and Powell and Pressburger. I fell in love with my husband after he took me to see a screening of Powell and Pressburger's "Black Narcissus". Brooding passion, swooning nuns in the heady atmosphere of the Himalayas, brought to life by Jack Cardiff on a sound stage using chalk, smoke and mirrors. How could I resist?
I picked my Baker's Dozen of favourite films for The Quietus
How was your experience of Crowdfunding?
Crowdfunding enabled me to make SOUND IT OUT, a film that just would never have been commissioned. It was very new at the time and we were one of the very films in the UK to crowdfund. I wrote up everything I learned for Directors notes, detailing the **SOUND IT OUT **process and the one for Orion. It's incredibly exciting, an enormous amount of work and I'm not sure I would ever do it again.
I'm a media student, can I send you a list of questions to answer for my homework?
Please, please, please for the love of Dolly Parton, please don't send me a list of questions to answer. I know your media studies teacher set you this as homework but you can probably find answers to all the questions you need here on this site or by using Google. Just say that I answered them, I won't tell!
I'm a filmmaker - can I send you my film for feedback?
I get a lot of requests to give feedback on film projects but I am afraid I don’t have the capacity to look at individual projects.
The best advice I can give you is to go out and make your film on the best camera you can. You will learn more than you can imagine by just getting out there - make mistakes, learn from them, find out what feels exciting on camera. What is the film that only you can make?
Newcomers day at [Sheffield Doc Fest] and the year round training they offer is brilliant for both novices and established filmmakers.
How would your films be different if you were a man?
Come on now, you're not going to get all gender essentialist about things now are you? You're better than that babes.
I'm a scriptwriter - can I send you my screenplay?
I am not looking for scripts at the moment.
I want to adapt your work into a drama, play, podcast etc
Drop me / my agent Matthew Bates at Sayle Screen a line.
I'm a composer or musician - can I send you my work?
I work with an amazing music supervisor Graham Langley at Loud and Cleared, he is always looking for new music so do send it to him.
Do you ever give masterclasses?
I have given lots of talks about my work, all over the world. My favourite version of this is a 250 image dense, scripted presentation that incorporates the lessons I have learnt as an artist infiltarting the film world. If this, or something bespoke is of interest drop me a line.
Do you host screenings or Q&As?
I have hosted many film Q&As in cinemas across the world, at festivals like Big Sky and SXSW, as well as orgs like IDA, Directors UK and Sheff Doc Fest. I also host online Q&As. If you'd like me to host or moderate something, get in touch to discuss rates and availability!
Can I book a screening of one of your films for my cinema / community group / library / School / public or private place
I'd love that. Please drop me a line listing the location, size of the audience, price of entry (if applicable), proposed date, host organisation etc and we can look at booking something in / the costs involved.