Education
In 1989 Sarah Jacobson graduated from Edina High School located in Edina, Minnesota, a suburb of Minneapolis.
camera operator director film producer
In 1989 Sarah Jacobson graduated from Edina High School located in Edina, Minnesota, a suburb of Minneapolis.
Jacobson moved to San Francisco in 1991 to pursue a career as a film director After studying with George Kuchar, Jacobson began making her first film while in her early twenties. Jacobson"s two major releases were I Was a Teenage Serial Killer and Both were well received at film festivals across North America such as the New York Underground Film Festival, the Chicago Underground Film Festival and Sundance.
I Was a Teenage Serial Killer featured songs by Heavens to Betsy.
She was listed in Spin Magazine as one of the "Top Influences on Girl Culture". Also outspoken in their praise were film critic Roger Ebert, filmmaker Allison Anders and Kim Gordon of Sonic Youth.
Editor Halter, writing in the Village Voice, considered I Was A Teenage Serial Killer,"..a key film of that decade"s angrily subversive underground cinema."
Sarah Jacobson was interviewed, reviewed and written about in such national publications as The New York Times, Village Voice, Spin, Bust and Film Threat among others Her novel and feature film and the grassroots manner in which Jacobson promoted the film garnered her much recognition in her specific field starred Lisa Gerstein and Beth Roman Allen of the band The Loudmouths, whose music along with that of Babes In Toyland and Mudhoney, is featured in the film.
Jello Biafra also appears in a cameo role.
Film Threat Magazine, in its Film Threat Video Guide labelled it as one of the "25 Underground Films You Must See". Following the release of this film Jacobson directed videos for the bands Manitoba or Astroman and Fluffy. She was a contributor to the film zine, Joanie4Jackie, a project created by Miranda July to showcase women"s independently made and DIY films.
Jacobson was also a participant in DiY Fest, a do-it-yourself travelling film festival.
Jacobson had just completed writing the screenplay for her next film when she died from endometrial cancer in 2004, aged 32. After her death, Marc Savlov wrote in the Austin Chronicle "There"s no doubt in the minds of anyone..that she greatly helped stoke the flames of the guerilla and indie filmmaking movement while becoming a voice for grrrl-positive cineastes everywhere".
The Sarah Jacobson Papers are located in the Fales Library at New York University.