Born Jan. 31,
1942, Northwood, Middlesex, England—died Feb. 19, 1994, London, England), was
an English film director, stage designer, diarist, artist, gardener, and
author. crafted highly personal avant-garde motion picture. While Jarman often
used classical plays or historical personages as the basis for his work, it was
said that all of his films were in some way "about" homosexuality.
Jarman studied at King’s College, London, and the Slade School of Fine Art. He
had some success as a painter and as a set designer for the Royal Ballet, the
English National Opera, and other arts companies. After designing sets for two
films by the controversial director Ken Russell, Jarman tried his hand at
moviemaking. The result, Sebastiane (1975), was a low-budget portrait of the
early Christian martyr and featured male nudity, homoerotic themes, and Latin
dialogue in a Super-8 format. Jarman’s other films (many of which were shot on
a shoestring budget with Super-8 or 16-mm rather than conventional 35-mm stock)
include Jubilee (1977), The Tempest (1979), Caravaggio (1986), The Last of England (1987), Edward II (1991), and Wittgenstein (1993). Blue (1993), which was made
when Jarman was nearly blind, featured an unchanging plain blue screen and a spoken
narrative of the director’s own thoughts and feelings about his battle with
AIDS. Glitterbug, a compilation of fragments from old home movies that was
commissioned for television, was previewed shortly before his death. Jarman
also wrote several books, including two volumes of memoirs, Modern Nature
(1992) and At Your Own Risk (1992).

The Last Of England
Produced by : James Mackay, Don
Boyd
Written by : Derek Jarman
Starring : Tilda Swinton, Nigel
Terry, Jonathan Phillips, Spencer Leigh, Spring - Mark Adley
Cinematography : Derek Jarman,
Christopher Hughes, Richard Heslop, Cerith Wyn Evans
Edited by : Derek Jarman,
Peter Cartwright, Angus Cook
Release date : August 1987
Running time : 87 min.
Country : United Kingdom
Language : English