Christopher Miles
Christopher Miles (19 April 1939 – 15 September 2023) was a British film director, producer and screenwriter.
Due to ‘A Vol d’Oiseau’ Miles was able to persuade the Boulting Brothers to part finance his first 35mm project The Six-Sided Triangle (1963), which he wrote, directed and co-produced. The film was nominated for an Academy Award.
After joining the Grade Organization, Leslie Grade asked Miles to write and direct a film for The Shadows pop group. Rhythm ‘n Greens (1964) which was distributed as a supporting feature throughout the ABC Cinemas circuit. Grade then offered Miles his first feature film, Up Jumped a Swagman (1965) a surrealist musical comedy. At 26, Miles became the youngest feature director working in England, which position he held for another five years.
Attracted to the French attitude to the cinema, and their ways of life, Miles made the Rue Lepic Slow Race (1967), and also filmed an original Jean Anouilh screenplay A Time for Loving (1971) and later Jean Genet’s The Maids (1975) for the American Film Theatre. The Maids was shown out of competition at Cannes in 1975.
Crew
TV
Tales of the Unexpected
Director
1979
Movie
The Maids
Director
1975
Movie
Priest of Love
Director
1981
Movie
Alternative 3
Director
1977
Movie
The Virgin and the Gypsy
Director
1970
Movie
That Lucky Touch
Director
1975
Movie
A Time for Loving
Director
1972
Movie
The Clandestine Marriage
Director
1999
Movie
Up Jumped a Swagman
Director
1965
Movie
The Six-Sided Triangle
Director
1963
Movie
Rhythm 'n' Greens
Writer
1964
Zinotchka
Director
1972