Graham Drysdale (BA (Hons) Film, PG Dip Film) is a Lecturer in the Media, Communication and Performing Arts Division.
- Overview
- Research Interests
- Research Publications
- Teaching & Learning
- Activities & Awards
Graham has a degree in Film from Edinburgh College of Art (1988) and a Post Graduate Diploma in Film & Television from Napier University (1996). He has been a lecturer in Media Production and Screenwriting at QMU since 2004. His main teaching commitments are: Media Production (level 1), Screenwriting (level 3) and Film/Screenwriting Dissertations (level 4).
Working as a lecturer and freelance filmmaker Graham has a wide experience of drama & documentary filmmaking in the broadcast, corporate and community filmmaking sectors.
He produced the BBC Scotland Tartan Short SWEETIE which was broadcast on BBC 2 and has worked as camera operator & researcher on broadcast documentaries.
As a freelance filmmaker his clients include National Museums Scotland, NHS, Forestry Commission Scotland, City of Edinburgh Council, Children in Scotland and the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland.
From 2002-04 Graham coordinated & delivered a screen training programme for new writers and directors in Edinburghs areas of regeneration. Funded by the Scottish Arts Council, this Pilton Video/QMU joint project involved over 80 participants; 16 short films were produced and the results screened at international film festivals; two of the short films won awards, including the 2005 Jim Poole Award for Best Scottish Short Film.
Grahams community filmmaking projects include work with inmates at HMP Edinburgh, black & minority ethnic youth groups at NMS and the UK Film Councils First Light scheme.
Grahams post graduate short film LOVELY won top awards at US film festivals in Aspen & Chicago making it eligible for an Academy Award nomination in 1999.
His short films have screened on Channel 4, FilmFour, BBC, Independent Film Channel (US) and have won awards from the Royal Television Society & BBC.
The British Council have selected three of his short films for entry to international film festivals, most recently, STUCK, which won the Silver Hugo award at the Chicago International Film Festival 2007.
Graham currently has a no-budget feature film in post-production - Wigilia - starring Duglas T. Stewart and Iwona Glowinska, produced via Tartan Features: Year Zero Filmmaking.
Active Research Interests:
- Practice based research: film & screenwriting.
- Sustainable low-budget filmmaking.
Graham's lectures and seminars focus on narrative short filmmaking: script, production, camera, directing and editing. They also look at screenwriting and creativity: enhancing students ability to generate ideas, amongst other topics.
Wigilia (2015) feature film, currently in post-production.