Ronnie Cramer

Ronnie Cramer
Born (1957-05-05) May 5, 1957
Bismarck, North Dakota, United States
Occupation Film producer, film director, screenwriter, artist, composer

Ronnie Cramer (born May 5, 1957) is an American film producer, film director, screenwriter, artist and composer.

Born in Bismarck, North Dakota, Cramer currently lives and works in Denver, Colorado. During the 1980s he produced watercolor paintings, video installations and played guitar in several rock bands, most notably Alarming Trends,[1] the subject and title of his first film (1987). Cramer's musical compositions include an award-winning score[2] for the Fritz Lang sci-fi classic Metropolis (1927 film). As a director, Cramer gained national attention with his film Even Hitler Had a Girlfriend, a 1991 black comedy which was named "Best Drive-In Movie of the Year" by cult critic Joe Bob Briggs.

Cramer's first documentary film was Highway Amazon (2001), which told the story of Christine Fetzer, a female body builder who travels the country wrestling men in hotel rooms. The film was named Best Documentary at the Humboldt Film Festival and has won other similar awards. Cramer's multimedia piece Pillow Girl combined traditional film techniques with pulp imagery and experimental music. It has been screened at over 150 film festivals worldwide and was named "Best Experimental Work" at several events, including the Miami Short Film Festival, the Route 66 Film Festival, and the Big Muddy Film Festival at Southern Illinois University.[3] Cramer's other work includes the experimental films Cantata in C Major, Mugs, Sixty in 60 and September Sketch Book.

Filmography

Awards

September Sketch Book

Living Canvas

Sixty in 60

Mugs

Cantata in C Major

Pillow Girl

30 Miles

Highway Amazon

References

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