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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Amos_GuttmanAmos Guttman - Wikipedia

    Amos Guttman (Hebrew: עמוס גוטמן; May 10, 1954 – February 16, 1993) was an Israeli film director, born in Romania. He directed the first-ever Israeli LGBT-themed film and most of his films were based on events that happened in his own personal life.

  2. www.imdb.com › name › nm0349742Amos Guttman - IMDb

    Amos Guttman was born on 10 May 1954 in Transilvania, Romania. He was a director and writer, known for Amazing Grace (1992), Drifting (1982) and Bar 51 (1986). He died on 16 February 1993 in Tel Aviv, Israel.

    • January 1, 1
    • Transilvania, Romania
    • January 1, 1
    • Tel Aviv, Israel
  3. Vor 2 Tagen · Shot by Guttman’s young assistant, Anat Dotan, this interview forms the spine of the film. It allows the filmmaker to leave a mark in his own terms. Taboo also features Guttman’s voice, or something like it, extensively in voiceover. AI-generated technology vocalizes the words of Guttman’s unpublished writing.

  4. Amos Guttman (May 10, 1954 – February 16, 1993) was an Israeli film director, born in Romania. He directed the first-ever Israeli LGBT-themed film and most of his films were based on events that happened in his own personal life.

  5. Guttman was the first filmmaker to have made camp, postmodernist films in Israel, knowingly and intentionally. ‘Camp’ is a term coined by Susan Sontag in the early 1960 – hailing it as kitsch’s conscious, ironic, theatrical, and over-the-top successor.

  6. Amos Guttman was born on May 10, 1954 in Transilvania, Romania. He was a director and writer, known for Amazing Grace (1992), Drifting (1982) and Bar 51 (1986). He died on February 16, 1993 in Tel Aviv, Israel.

  7. Amos Guttman (1954-1993) was a screenwriter, director, and one of the most unique creative voices in Israeli history. As an openly gay man, many of Guttman’s films were centred around gay male life in Israel.