Thomas McKay Martin Jr. (born September 7, 1979), known professionally as T. J. Martin, is an American filmmaker. Martin's film Undefeated (2011), for which he was co-director, co-editor, and co-cinematographer, won the 2012 Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature, making Martin the first film director of African-American descent to win an Academy Award for a feature-length film.[2][3]
Martin graduated from Roosevelt High School in Seattle and went on to attend Fairhaven College at Western Washington University, where he studied American Cultural Studies, graduating in 2005.[1] While there, Martin co-directed his first film, the feature documentary A Day in the Hype of America (2002), concerning the hysteria around the Y2K problem, which won Best Documentary at the 2002 Rhode Island International Film Festival.[7] Martin then directed short films such as Loves Martha and On the Rocks, the latter is a docudrama about drug and alcohol addiction.[8]
Career
Feature films
In 2007, Martin met future directing partner Daniel Lindsay in Los Angeles, when they collaborated on the feature documentary Last Cup: Road to the World Series of Beer Pong, directed by Lindsay and edited by Martin.[citation needed] The film was distributed by Morgan Spurlock's company Warrior Poets.[citation needed]
As co-directors, Martin and Lindsay next made the feature documentary Undefeated, which chronicles the football team of Manassas High School in Memphis, Tennessee.[9] The film focuses on the lives of several of the players and their coach, Bill Courtney, over the course of a single season. Undefeated premiered at the 2011 SXSW Film Festival and was purchased by The Weinstein Company for North American distribution just hours after the first screening.[10] Released to near universal acclaim, the film went on to win the Academy Award for Best Feature Documentary in 2012. Undefeated holds a 96% rating on the review aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes.[11]
On April 28, 2015, Martin gave a talk at TEDx on Orcas Island, Washington, titled “Reimagining America’s Culture Narrative”, in which he discussed race and diversity in the film and television industry and mass media more broadly.[14]
In 2017, Martin and co-director/co-editor Lindsay, made the documentary feature LA 92. Composed entirely of archival footage, the film explores the days of civil unrest that followed the acquittal of four LAPD officers captured on video beating motorist Rodney King—the events commonly referred to as the 1992 Los Angeles riots. LA 92 premiered at the 2017 Tribeca Film Festival and made its broadcast premiere shortly thereafter on the National Geographic Channel. The film was named by several publications, including Rolling Stone and The Playlist, as one of the best documentaries of 2017.[15][16] In June 2017, LA 92 won the Primetime Emmy Award for Exceptional Merit in Documentary Filmmaking.[17] The film was shortlisted for Best Documentary Feature for the 90th Academy Awards and holds a 97% rating on the review aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes.[18]
In 2015, Martin co-directed a documentary special titled I Am Dying, which was produced by Joaquin Phoenix, Casey Affleck and Mary Lisio for the National Geographic Channel.[21][22] The film chronicles Renee and Rita Heidtman as Renee loses her life to terminal breast cancer while her sister Rita cares for her.
In 2018, Martin co-directed Territorio de Zaguates, episode five of the TV series Dogs. The show is an episodic television show exploring the relationships between humans and dogs. The episode featured Territorio de Zaguates, a no-kill dog sanctuary in Costa Rica. The series premiered on Netflix in November 2018.[23]
Other work
Working officially as the directing duo Martin + Lindsay, Martin and Lindsay have continued their work across various platforms including short films, television, and commercial work. Their short film My Favorite Picture of You (2013), was built around an audio interview with Martin's grandparents[24] and was screened at numerous film festivals, was featured on The Atlantic[25] and Vice,[26] chosen as a Vimeo Staff Pick, and nominated for a Webby Award.[27][28]
In 2020, Martin and Lindsay's "The Truth is Worth It" campaign for The New York Times swept the commercial awards circuit[citation needed] and won a Clio award and two Grand Prix Lions for Best Film and Film Craft at Cannes Lions.[31]
^Berry, S. Torriano; Berry, Venise T. (2015). Historical Dictionary of African American Cinema. Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. p. xxix. ISBN978-1-4422-4701-7.