Marc Singer (documentarian)

Marc Singer is an English documentary filmmaker. He was born and raised in London, England and moved to Florida, United States, when he was 16. After graduating high school, he moved to New York City.

Singer's first film Dark Days, about a homeless community living in the tunnels underneath New York City, was awarded The freedom of Expression Award, The Cinematography Award and The Audience Award at the Sundance Film Festival of 2000. Dark Days was also awarded Best Documentary/Non-Fiction film of 2000 by the Los Angeles Film Critics Association and won the Independent Spirit Award for Best Documentary of 2000 from the IPF. Glowing reviews called the documentary "an extraordinarily powerful film," "intimate, engrossing and at moments, even surprisingly funny" and was placed on many reviewers' Best Films of 2000 lists. Singer was invited to be a delegate at the University of Colorado annual Conference on World Affairs.[1]

In June 2001, Singer moved to North Central Florida. Working with the Department of Environmental Protection and the Florida Geological Society, Singer participated and documented the efforts of two organizations, Global Underwater Explorers (GUE) and the Woodville Karst Plain Project.[2] Based in High Springs, the divers of G.U.E. and the W.K.P.P. are committed to exploring, understanding, and mapping the labyrinthine of water-filled cave systems that make up the Floridan aquifer. Both organizations have, in their explorations, pushed the outer limit of diving technology accumulating numerous world records in their respective fields of exploration. The short films made are now used as a tool in schools across Florida teaching children about the importance of water protection and conservation.[3]

Starting from April 2005, Singer was embedded with a United States Marine Corps Force Reconnaissance Platoon for 2 years, training and working on creating a new documentary film. Singer was deployed overseas along with the platoon, but unfortunately, the platoon did not receive the missions that they were expecting, and thus, insufficient footage was filmed to create a documentary.

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