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Jamin Winans
Birth at
4 December 1977
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Jamin Vinans is an American film director, writer, editor and music composer. His most famous films are "11:59" and Ink . Jamin was born in 1977 in Colorado, where he spent his childhood. He attended Bergen Park Elementary and then Evergreen High School, which is also located in Colorado.
Already at school, Vinans had a dream - to make films. However, after graduation, he went to college in Los Angeles. Jamin soon realized he had to follow his dream. Then he dropped out of college and completely
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Jamin Vinans is an American film director, writer, editor and music composer. His most famous films are
"11:59" and
Ink .
Jamin was born in 1977 in Colorado, where he spent his childhood. He attended Bergen Park Elementary and then Evergreen High School, which is also located in Colorado.
Already at school, Vinans had a dream - to make films. However, after graduation, he went to college in Los Angeles. Jamin soon realized he had to follow his dream. Then he dropped out of college and completely immersed himself in the world of film and television.
Jamin Vinans made his first films at the age of ten. Then the heroes of his paintings were wire and cardboard. In 2003, he directed the first true short film called Blanston. It was a film about four heroes trying to get insurance from the company they worked for.
In the same year, Vinans directed a second short film, The Maze, dedicated to a scientist trying to understand how our universe works. In 2005, Jamin directed a new film called Spin. It was the story of a DJ trying to unravel the chain of events that happened to him.
This short film brought the director about forty awards at various festivals in the United States and about eighty at festivals around the world. In the same year, he directed his first feature film, 11:59. This is the story of a photojournalist trying to remember what happened behind him in the last 24 hours. The painting received several awards at the international festival in Montreal.
In 2009, Jamin Vinans directed the film Ink about a father's attempts to get his daughter out of a coma. A year later, his new work “Uncle Jack” was published, dedicated to a tramp trying to tell a bedtime story. These films also earned the director several awards.