Julia Reichert
Julia Reichert has been an independent filmmaker since 1970. With her partner, James Klein, she made many innovative films, including Growing Up Female, the first documentary about women from a feminist perspective; Union Maids, one of the first oral history films; Methadone: An American Way of Dealing, which challenged government policies on heroin addiction, and Seeing Red, a documentary film about American communists which earned them their second Academy Award nomination. She is a founder of New Days Films, a cooperative of filmmakers who do their own distribution. Reichert co-wrote and directed the feature film Emma and Elvis. She co-produced the acclaimed documentary Personal Belongings, directed by Steven Bognar, and the feature film The Dream Catcher, directed by Ed Radtke. Her most recent project, the four-hour documentary A Lion in the House, about children with cancer, was televised nationally on PBS and the recipient of many awards, including a featured screening at Sundance and a nomination for the 2006 Independent Spirit Award as the year's best documentary.
Last updated June 12, 2007