The award winning documentary film director and producer, Susan Morgan Cooper, grew up in a tiny village in Wales where her parents produced plays to raise money for charity. Shortly after arriving in America, she landed a small role in a Clint Eastwood film, but found film editing more fascinating than acting.

In 1991, when Susan met a 16-year-old girl from Croatia, displaced by The Balkan War, she felt compelled to make her first documentary, Mirjana- One Girl’s Journey. She went on to produce and direct a documentary television series called Heroes and Sheroes about ordinary people doing extraordinary things for others. Afterwards she spent three months filming in Tuscany The Making Of Shadows in the Sun, directed by Brad Mirman with Harvey Keitel, Joshua Jackson, Claire Forlani and Giancarlo Giannini .

The following is our interview with Susan Morgan Cooper about her recent projects:

Susan then made the highly acclaimed, award-winning documentary, An Unlikely Weapon. It was the story of Pulitzer Prize Winning Photographer, Eddie Adams, who’s Saigon Execution photo was credited with helping end the Vietnam War. The Hollywood Reporter called it ‘a terrific documentary’.

Susan Morgan Cooper & Bijan Tehrani at SeeFest

Susan then went to China to direct and produce Mulberry Child, a film that traces a present day mother and daughter’s emotional disconnect back to Mao’s Cultural Revolution. Roger Ebert called Mulberry Child ‘a powerful and touching film’ and gave it three and a half stars.

With Cass Warner, Susan wrote and produced a documentary HOPPER: In His Own Words about the iconic actor Dennis Hopper.

Susan’s, To the Moon and Back, is the story behind the Russian Adoption Ban and it’s impact on the lives of hundreds of American families and thousands of Russian orphans. Huffington Post calls the award-winning film a ‘highly evocative exposé’.

Susan is in post-production on Fatal Distraction, a documentary about an innocent father sentenced to life without parole after police fuel misinformation and the media incites the public.

She is also in pre-production on a narrative feature film , East L.A. Kings. Based on the real life events of a cop who takes a group of troubled boys off the streets through the P.A.L. program and turns them into a championship roller hockey team.

Source: IMDB

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Bijan (Hassan) Tehrani Founder and Editor in Chief of Cinema Without Borders, is a film director, writer, and a film critic, his first article appeared in a weekly film publication in Iran 45 years ago. Bijan founded Cinema Without Borders, an online publication dedicated to promotion of international cinema in the US and around the globe, eighteen years ago and still works as its editor in chief. Bijan is has also been a columnist and film critic for the Iranian monthly film related medias for 45 years and during the past 5 years he has been a permanent columnist and film reviewer for Film Emrooz (Film Today), a popular Iranian monthly print film magazine. Bijan has won several awards in international film festivals and book fairs for his short films and children's books as well as for his services to the international cinema. Bijan is a member of Iranian Film Writers Critics Society and International Federation of Film Critics (FIPRESCI). He is also an 82nd Golden Globe Awards voter.

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