Shimon Dotan was born in Romania in 1949 and moved to Israel in 1959.
He grew up in an agricultural cooperative, served five years in the
Israeli military as a Navy Seal, and went on to get his BFA at Tel Aviv
University, where his student films won twice Israel's Best Short Film
and Best Director Awards.
Dotan is the recipient of numerous awards including, the Special Jury
Prize for Best World Documentary Feature at Sundance Film Festival (Hot
House), Silver Bear Award at Berlin Film Festival (Smile of the Lamb,
best actor), Best Film Award at New Port Beach Film Festival (You Can
Thank Me Later), two times winner of Israeli Academy Award for Best
Film and Best Director (Repeat Dive, Smile Of The Lamb) and others.
Dotan's feature films have received both critical acclaim and
commercial success. His debut writing/directing/producing effort,
Repeat Dive (1982), which chronicles Dotan's own experiences as a
member of Israel's elite Navy Commando unit, won three Israeli Academy
Awards, including Best Picture and Best Director, and was selected for
the official competition at the Berlin and Chicago Film Festivals. He
followed that effort with two quasi-documentaries, Souvenirs from Tel
Aviv and Souvenirs from Hebron (1982). His 1986 feature film The Smile
of the Lamb (1986), written, directed by Dotan and co-produced with
Yonatan Aroch, won numerous awards including the Silver Bear at Berlin
and six Israeli Academy Awards, including those for Best Director and
Best Picture. In 1991, Dotan wrote and directed The Finest Hour
starring Rob Lowe, Tracy Griffith and Gale Hanson.
After moving to Montreal Canada in 1991 Dotan co-founded Cinequest
Films Inc. together with partner Netaya Anbar. In 1994 Dotan directed
and produced Warriors, starring Macha Grenon, Gary Busey and Michael
Pare. In 1996 Dotan directed and produced Coyote Run, starring Peter
Greene, Macha Grenon and Michael Pare. The critically acclaimed You Can
Thank Me Later (1999), was produced together with Anbar and directed by
Dotan in 1999 and starred Ellen Burstyn, Genevieve Boujold, Amanda
Plummer and Mary McDonnell. It was awarded Best Film at Newport Beach
Film Festival, selected for the closing night at the Palm Springs Film
Festival and had it's opening gala at the Montreal Film Festival. In
1999-2000 Dotan produced The List (1999) with Ryan O'Neal, Rock
Lafortune and Ben Gazara, Cause of Death (2000) with Maxim Roy, Patrick
Bergin and Michael Ironside and Wilder (2000) with Pam Grier, Romano
Orzari and Rutger Hauer. In 2001 Dotan produced Hidden Agenda with
Dolph Lundgren and Maxim Roy. In 2003 Dotan wrote the script for
Watching TV With The Red Chinese and in 2005 he wrote Frenzy based on a
novel by David Grossman. In 2006 Dotan wrote, directed and co-produced
the documentary/feature Hot House. It won the Special Jury Award for
Best World Documentary at Sundance. In 2007 Dotan produced the
Canadian-Chinese coproduction Diamond Dogs.