The death of a father and a grandmother, a marriage and the birth of a son. As McElwee observes, 'everything begins and ends with family.' And in the life of a family, as in everything else, it is those seemingly inconsequential moments that often turn out to be profoundly important, such as the moment when McElwee's father picks up his son's movie camera, and the moments when McElwee decides to put it down. Filled with black humor and deepest pathos, Time Indefinite is a magisterial chronicle of place and character, capturing the fullest range of human emotion. (MoMA)
- Atlanta Film Festival - Best Documentary
- New England Film Festival - Best of Festival
- Nashville Film Festival - Best of Festival
- Viennale International Festival
- Seattle Film Festival
- Hawaii Film Festival
- Montreal Festival International du Nouveau Cinema
- Vancouver Festival
- Rotterdam Film Festival
Ross McElwee
Ross McElwee received his BA from Brown University followed by an MS from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1977. He freelanced for a few years, shooting for documentarians D.A. Pennebaker in Washington DC, and John Marshall in Namibia before beginning to direct his own documentaries.
Ross McElwee has made eleven feature-length documentaries as well as several shorter films. Sherman's March won numerous awards, including Best Documentary at the Sundance Film Festival. Time Indefinite won Best Film Award in several festivals. Six O'Clock News won Best Documentary at the Hawaii International Film Festival. Bright Leaves premiered at the 2003 Cannes Film Festival’s Directors’ Fortnight. Photographic Memory premiered at the 2011 Venice Film Festival.
McElwee's films have been included in the major festivals of Berlin, London, Vienna, Rotterdam, Florence, Quito, Sydney, Seoul, and Wellington. Retrospectives include the Museum of Modern Art; Art Institute of Chicago; American Museum of the Moving Image, New York; and États généraux du film documentaire in Lussas, France.
Ross McElwee teaches filmmaking at Harvard University where he is a professor in the Department of Visual and Environmental Studies.