About Joel Fendelman

If you put a camera in his hands something good will come from it.
— Albert Maysles
 

With roots in Miami, Austin and New York City, Joel Fendelman has written, produced and directed a number of award-winning narrative and documentary films.

Joel most recently received an IDA Documentary Award  for his fourth feature film "Man on Fire", a documentary about a white Texas preacher who self-immolated in his birth town of Grand Saline in order to bring attention to the unrepented racism there. The film uses the act as a vehicle to explore racism in small town East Texas and indirectly America as a whole. "Man on Fire"  premiered at the Slamdance Film Festival in January 2018 and had its broadcast premiere on PBS Independent Lens during the 2018-19 season.

In 2016, Joel’s short film "Game Night", a film about aging and unfulfilled dreams, premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival and won best super short at the Savannah Film Festival.

His second narrative feature film "Remittance" was filmed in Singapore and the Philippines and follows the story of a Filipino mother who travels to Singapore to work as a maid in order to bring a better life to her family back home, but in the process finds her own empowerment amongst the servitude. The film looks at class, identity and the universal human experience that crosses all these boundaries. Remittance won many festival awards including "Best actress" and "Best Screenplay" at the Brooklyn Film Festival and is currently being distributed worldwide.

In 2011, Joel completed his first dramatic narrative feature "David", a coming of age story about identity and friendship between a Muslim and a Jewish boy in the ethnic neighborhoods of south Brooklyn. The film screened at the Rome and Montreal World Film Festival, which awarded the film its prestigious Ecumenical Prize, and at many other venues around the globe. It also sparked conversations within and between Jewish and Muslim religious groups universally and continues to be a desired resource for teaching tolerance amongst children.

Joel strives to embrace socially conscious stories that deal with religion, social class, minorities and communicates the underlying connection between us all.

 
Fendelman turns in something with heart and plenty of visual polish, making him a screenwriter and director worth keeping an eye on.
— Patrick Hickey Jr. | Review Fix