21 September 2006

A Brief Filmography


I've been asked many times about the films I've produced, the awards I've won and more. Here is a partial list for the curious.

ABOUT KEVIN P. MILLER

Kevin P. Miller began producing documentaries in the late 1980s and was immediately rewarded with numerous international film and television awards for his efforts. His first documentary, The Promised Land not only won international accolades, but more importantly, helped raise nearly $1,000,000 in donations from a live TV audience to benefit the homeless — including homeless war veterans.

“I learned at a very young age that I was blessed with the ability to write — and to tell powerful stories,” Miller said. “And it was liberating to know what I wanted to do at such a young age. So I decided long ago that I would use my gifts to fight for social justice.”

For more than 20 years, Miller has produced films that others shy away from. “Often the issues are challenging and difficult. Sometimes the stories are tragic — things we’d rather not discuss,” he said. He tackled kids in crisis, race relations, poverty and more at the beginning of his documentary career.

When he produced The Promised Land, which won a Bronze Medal at the N.Y. International Film & Television Festival, his view of filmmaking took a dramatic turn. “While filming The Promised Land, I found countless veterans sleeping on the streets in the middle of the coldest winter I’d ever experienced. There I was, in six-degree weather, with the wind howling off Lake Erie, finding heroes lying beneath bridges and behind garbage dumps. I remember the shame I felt for our nation. It was truly the hardest mirror I ever had to peer into. But I wanted to try to tell their stories. I wanted to help.”

Miller carried that same spirit forward into healthcare and produced his first film in the genre of "medical freedom of choice" with the film Let Truth Be the Bias, narrated by James Earl Jones. That film has been heralded by many as a critical component in the passage of America's greatest health legislation, called DSHEA, the Dietary Supplement Health Education Act. In 2005, he produced the film about Codex Alimentarius and 'Free Trade' called We Become Silent, which was narrated by the great actress Dame Judi Dench.

His new film is called Generation RX.


PARTIAL FILMOGRAPHY AND LIST OF AWARDS

Kids in Crisis, winner of a Silver Medal at the N.Y. International Film and Television Festival.

The Promised Land, TV documentary. Won a Bronze Medal in the category of International TV Programming at N.Y. International Film and Television Festival. This film also won four regional Emmys and one national Emmy nomination.

The War Within, TV documentary. Won four regional Emmy awards.

Let Truth Be The Bias, Gold Medal at N.Y. International Film and Television Festival. Narrated by James Earl Jones.

Secrets of the Great Salt Lake, 1996-97; Honorable Mention at the N.Y. International Film and Television Festival.

We Become Silent, 2005, 29-minute documentary about Codex Alimentarius. Narrated by Dame Judi Dench

Generation RX, 2008; 81 minutes. Narrated by David Suchet, O.B.E.

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