Tony Scott

 

Anthony D. L. “Tony” Scott (born June 21, 1944) is an English film director. His films include Top Gun, Beverly Hills Cop II, True Romance, Crimson Tide, Enemy of the State, Man on Fire and Déjà Vu. His elder brother is fellow film director Ridley Scott.

Trade Mark

Constantly wears a faded red baseball cap. It often appears in his films.

Often casts Denzel Washington and Christopher Walken.

[director's trademark - camera pan across a large tower]. The “top of the world” tower at the casino in Domino and Beat The Devil, The tower in Mexico City at the start of Man on Fire

Has used dogs in many of his movies including Top Gun, True Romance, Crimson Tide, The Fan, Enemy of the State, Man on Fire, and Domino.

Kinetic, choppy editing

Frequently has sunlight flashing at characters to make the picture more effective

Trivia

Brother of director Ridley Scott

Uncle of Jake Scott

Partner, with Ridley Scott, in Scott Free Productions.

Once had a biography of Mexican icon Pancho Villa in production. At the same time, his brother, Ridley Scott, also had a “Pancho Villa” project in development. The story made headlines, and although both brothers are careful to note differences in the two projects, neither project has yet been produced (2001).

His films are known for their rich visual style, with dazzling cinematography and beautiful production designs.

Visual trademarks include heavy use of smoke, colored filters, and shafts of light breaking through windows, often through blinds.

Often works with film editor Chris Lebenzon.

Starred in brother Ridley Scott’s first filmmaking effort, “Boy and Bicycle”, in 1960 at the age of 16, playing the title role. The film is currently owned by the British Film Institute, and video copies are currently available for purchase.

Is an avid mountain climber.

Graduated from the Royal College Of Art In London, England.

Has directed literally thousands of television commercials, most for his brother Ridley Scott’s company RSA (Ridley Scott Associates), between the early 1970s and the early 1980s.

Once linked romantically to Brigitte Nielsen, whom he directed in Beverly Hills Cop II (1987). Both were married at the time, Nielsen to Sylvester Stallone. Scott has since admitted the affair was what led to his divorce from his second wife.

Turned down a chance to direct Beautiful Girls (1996), because he felt he couldn’t do justice to Scott Rosenberg’s script, which placed characterization and dialogue above dramatic event.

In the early 1980s, was reported to be a contender to direct the highly regarded screenplay Starman (1984), since British commercial veterans were suddenly in vogue in Hollywood (‘Alan Parker’, Adrian Lyne, Hugh Hudson, Ridley Scott, etc.) However, the reaction to his debut film, The Hunger (1983), was so negative that his stock in Hollywood sank almost instantly. Starman was ultimately directed by John Carpenter, and Scott’s next film was Top Gun (1986), three years later.

Son of Elizabeth Jean Scott.

Uncle of actress Jordan Scott

Dedicated his movie Spy Game (2001) to the memory of his mother, Elizabeth Scott, who died that year.

Performance (1970) by Donald Cammell and Nicolas Roeg is one of his favourite films.

Unlike brother Ridley Scott, he utilizes mostly American actors in lead roles. (Only four leads in his features have not been American since The Hunger (1983): Catherine Deneuve and David Bowie in The Hunger (1983); Nicole Kidman in Days of Thunder (1990)) and Keira Knightley in Domino (2005)).

Often works with editor Christian Wagner

He and his brother Ridley have both worked with the following actors: Susan Sarandon (Thelma & Louise, The Hunger), Tom Skerrit (Alien, Top Gun), Tom Cruise (Legend, Top Gun), Viggo Mortensen (G.I. Jane, Crimson Tide), Brad Pitt (Thelma & Louise, True Romance), Giancarlo Giannini (Hannibal, Man on Fire), Gary Oldman (Hannibal, True Romance), and Denzel Washington (American Gangster, Man on Fire et al).

Was classmates with Stephen Goldblatt and Richard Loncrain in Film School.

Often casts Denzel Washington.

Former brother-in-law of Sandy Watson.

 

robert-zemeckis

Robert Zemeckis

Robert Lee Zemeckis (born May 14, 1952) is an American film director, producer and screenwriter. Zemeckis first came to public attention in the 1980s as the director of the comedic time-travel Back to the Future movie series, as well as the Oscar-winning live-action/cartoon epic, Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988), though in the 1990s he diversified into more dramatic fare, including 1994′s Forrest Gump, for which he won an Academy Award for Best Director.

His films are characterized by an interest in state-of-the-art special effects, including the early use of match moving in Back to the Future Part II (1989) and the pioneering performance capture techniques seen in The Polar Express (2004), Beowulf (2007) and A Christmas Carol (2009). Though Zemeckis has often been pigeonholed as a director interested only in effects, his work has been defended by several critics, including David Thomson, who wrote that “No other contemporary director has used special effects to more dramatic and narrative purpose.”

Trivia:

 

Sits on USC School of Cinema-Television’s Board of Councilors.

Attended University of Southern California, School of Cinema. Former classmates included George Lucas, John Milius and others.

First television script that he and Bob Gale sold in Hollywood was for “Kolchak: The Night Stalker: Chopper (#1.15)” (1975).

His first wife, Mary Ellen Trainor, appeared in four of his films: Romancing the Stone (1984) (as Joan Wilder’s kidnapped sister, Elaine), Back to the Future Part II (1989) (as Officer Reese), Death Becomes Her (1992) (as Vivian Adams), and Forrest Gump (1994) (as Jenny’s babysitter).

Announced through his company ImageMovers in August 2002 that he will direct a film adaptation of the popular horror/fantasy comic book “Route 666.” The comic, published by CrossGen Comics, centers on a young woman who is besieged by demons and other strange creatures during the Cold War.

Father, with Mary Ellen Trainor, of Alexander Zemeckis.

Owns two production companies – ImageMovers and DarkCastle Entertainment (which he co-owns with Joel Silver).

Is of Lithuanian Heritage.

Is a good friend of director Peter Jackson. The two of them have used four of the same actors: Michael J. Fox, who appeared in the Back to the Future trilogy, played the lead role in Jackson’s The Frighteners (1996), which Zemeckis produced; Peter Dobson, who also appeared in The Frighteners, also played Elvis Presley in Forrest Gump (1994), although Kurt Russell provided the voice; Elijah Wood made his film debut in Back to the Future Part II (1989), then went on to play Frodo Baggins in The Lord of the Rings trilogy; Miranda Otto, who played a distraught neighbor in What Lies Beneath (2000), played Eowyn in The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002) and The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003).

Three of the actors he has worked with have acted on camera for one of his films and provided a character voice in another film. Kurt Russell, who appeared in Used Cars (1980), provided the voice of Elvis Presley in Forrest Gump (1994). He has also played Elvis in a made-for-TV film for John Carpenter. Charles Fleischer, who voiced Roger Rabbit in Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988), also played a mechanic in the past and future sequences of Back to the Future Part II (1989). Kathleen Turner, the voice of Jessica Rabbit, played the lead role in Romancing the Stone (1984).

Shares the same birthday as George Lucas.

Interviewed in “Directors Close Up: Interviews with Directors Nominated for Best Film by the Directors Guild of America,” ed. by Jeremy Kagan, Scarecrow Press, 2006.

Was initially signed to direct Cocoon (1985) but changed his mind when Michael Douglas hired him to direct Romancing the Stone (1984).

2007 – Ranked #18 on EW’s The 50 Smartest People in Hollywood.

Has in his archives a letter of rejection from every studio rejecting Back to the Future (1985), because they thought it was too soft for the type of teen movie at the time, except for Disney who thought it was too racy.

He is rated an Instrument Flight Rules (IFR) private pilot.

Has an affinity for Italy. His mother was born in Italy, he and his second wife Leslie Zemeckis were married in Italy, and they have a vacation home (a villa) in Tuscany, Italy.

Lives in Santa Barbara, California with his second wife, Leslie Zemeckis, and their two children [2010].

 

george lucas

George Walton Lucas, Jr. (born May 14, 1944) is an Academy Award-nominated American film producer, screenwriter, director and founder/chairman of Lucasfilm Ltd. He is best known for being the creator of the epic science fiction franchise Star Wars and joint creator of the archaeologist-adventurer character Indiana Jones. Today, Lucas is one of the American film industry’s most financially successful independent directors/producers, with an estimated net worth of $3.0 billion as of 2009.

Trivia:

 

Three adopted children: Amanda Lucas (aka Amanda Lucas, b. 1981), Katie Lucas (b. 1988), and Jett Lucas(b. 1993).

Graduated from USC’s school of cinema (1962)

Shortly before graduating high school, he was involved in a high speed car accident that left him hospitalized and near death.

Lucas provided all the funding for Star Wars: Episode V – The Empire Strikes Back (1980), Star Wars: Episode VI – Return of the Jedi (1983) and Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace (1999).

George Lucas

George Lucas

 

For 2nd consecutive year, ranked No. 4 on Entertainment Weekly’s annual list of “101 Most Powerful People in Entertainment.” Ranked just ahead of Steven Spielberg and just behind the power couple that runs Time Warner Turner media empire.

Sits on USC School of Cinema-Television’s Board of Councilors.

In the 2001 edition of the Forbes’ “400 Richest People In America”, it is reported that Lucas’ fortune is $3 billion.

He is a diabetic.

He has created the image of always being on the cutting edge of technology. However, when he writes, he does it in longhand in a loose leaf binder rather than on a word processor.

He was so impressed with relatively unknown stage actor James Wheaton that he cast him over studio objections in the voiceover role of “OMM” in THX 1138 (1971). The studio wanted Orson Welles to play the role.

His script for Star Wars (1977) was turned down by every major Hollywood studio, the reason being that no one would want to see it. In a last ditch attempt, Lucas approached 20th Century Fox who decided to go ahead with the script even though they were convinced it would flop. Star Wars ended up becoming the highest grossing movie ever released at that time. It still ranks as one of the highest grossing movies ever made to this day.

Sold Lucasfilm’s Computer Graphics Division to Apple Computer co-founder Steve Jobs, and it later became Pixar Animation Studio.

His name backwards is Egroeg Sacul. This name is also used in the Disney theme park ride Star Tours (1987).

Rewrote the ending of Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981) to tighten it up due to the fact that the scene would have been too busy. It originally ended with the mine-car chase that was later added to Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984).

Conceived Indiana Jones while on vacation with his friend Steven Spielberg in Hawaii. Lucas decided to produce while Spielberg would direct.

Was engaged to longtime girlfriend Linda Ronstadt.

With THX 1138 (1971) and Star Wars (1977), Lucas re-invented the way sound was used in films. Using it in both a linear and abstract way, to tell the story, he pushed sound design to the forefront of the filmmaking process.

Refuses to put “critics quotes” on his movie posters. Something that infuriates many critic societies.

Biography in: John Wakeman, editor. “World Film Directors, Volume Two, 1945-1985″. Pages 605-610. New York: The H.W. Wilson Company, 1988.

He based the character of Han Solo on his friend Francis Ford Coppola.

He originally wanted his friend Steven Spielberg to direct Star Wars: Episode VI – Return of the Jedi (1983), but his dispute with the Director’s Guild barred him from doing so. He settled for director Richard Marquand instead.

Became so stressed during the filming of the original Star Wars (1977) that he checked himself into a hospital, where he was diagnosed with hyper-tension.

Said that Alec Guinness was very helpful to him during the filming of the original Star Wars (1977) even to the point of getting the other actors to work more seriously.

Disowned Howard the Duck (1986) after the film’s release.

When he began his apprenticeship at Warner Brothers, what he wanted to see most was the Animation Department. He claims that the day he arrived on the lot was the very day the Animation Department was closed down.

Despite a reputation as Hollywood blockbusters, all of the Star Wars films are actually independent films, with the exception of Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope. The only way he could get the required funding to make the film was to apply for studio funding. With the success of the film and its merchandising, Lucas no longer needed to go to the studios. For Episodes V and VI, he took out bank loans, which he paid off on each films’ earnings. For the Prequel Trilogy, he no longer needed bank loans, having made enough money to fund each film out of his own personal savings.

He made what was at the time an unusual deal for the film, Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981). Paramount financed the film’s entire $20 million budget. In exchange, Lucas would own over 40% of the film and collect almost half of the profits after the studio a grossed a certain amount. It turned out to be a very lucrative deal for Lucas. Paramount executive Michael Eisner said that he felt the script for the film was the best he had ever read.

Won the American Film Institute’s Life Time Achievement Award.

His favorite stage of filmmaking is editing the film together.

His nickname in high school was Luke. This later became the name of the hero of his original Star Wars trilogy, Luke Skywalker.

He originally wanted to do a film adaptation of Flash Gordon, but he could not obtain the rights, so he created Star Wars instead, which was in a similar vein to Flash Gordon.

Used the 1927 U.F.A. film “Metropolis” as guidelines for some of his Star Wars characters – the “robotic man” for “C3PO” and the “robots creator” as “Anakin Skywalker.” Both the creator and Anakin lost a hand. The “robotic man’s creator” loses his hand while building the robot.

Became rich almost overnight due to him keeping the rights to Star Wars and not selling them outright to Twentieth Century Fox.

In the 2005 edition of Forbes’ “400 Richest People in America” list, his net worth is estimated at $3.5 billion. He and good friend Steven Spielberg are the only filmmakers on the list.

Plans to reissue all of the Star Wars movies in 3-D versions using the Dimensionalization process by ILM. The process was first used in Chicken Little (2005).

Had a dog named ‘Indiana’ which not only inspired the Indiana Jones character, but Chewbacca from Star Wars was also modelled around the way the dog looked.

He received a medal from US president George Bush for outstanding achievement in improvements in technology in movies made by his special effects company ILM

Star Wars (1977), AKA as “Star Wars: Episode IV: A New Hope” is ranked #39 on the American Film Institute’s 100 Most Inspiring Movies of All Time.

Grand marshal, Tournament of Roses parade [2007]

He, his mentor Francis Ford Coppola, and friend Steven Spielberg presented Martin Scorsese with his first ever Oscar for Best Director for The Departed (2006).

Is a fan of “Doctor Who” (1963).

Skywalker Ranch, Lucas’ film production facility, covers an area of some 3,000 acres in Northern California’s Marin County hills. The precise address is: 5858 Lucas Valley Road, Nicasio, CA, 94946. The facility employs around 200 personnel, is home to a baseball field, a vineyard, 3 restaurants and a fire station, not to mention the array of hi-tech amenities. The fact that Skywalker Ranch is located off Lucas Valley Road is pure coincidence.

Graduated from Modesto’s Roosevelt Junior High school in 1958.

Rankings on Premiere’s annual Power 100 List – 2002: #14; 2003: #10; 2004: #16; 2005: #11.

Quit the DGA after some disputes over the opening credits in Star Wars: Episode V – The Empire Strikes Back (1980). The movie had no opening credits and the DGA fined Lucas with $250.000, which he paid, and eventually quit.

George Lucas has been in a relationship with Mellody Hobson, president of Ariel Investments, LLC, since 2007.

Lucas supported Barack Obama for President in 2008. With girlfriend, Mellody Hobson, he attended the “We Are One” Presidential Pre-Inaugural Concert on 18 January 2009.

As a fan of “Family Guy” (1999), he occasionally gives the producers the clearance to do “Star Wars” gags on the show.

George Lucas’s close friend John Landis was originally slated to direct Howard the Duck (1986) but after reading the script turned down the opportunity due to the police car crashes in the finale. He felt this was too similar to that of his previous film The Blues Brothers (1980).

During pre-production of Empire Strikes Back (1980) George created a phony working title – not for fan purposes, but to save money. Vendors and service providers, upon getting wind of the next Star Wars picture, were doubling their prices.

Lives in San Anselmo, California.

 

Jim_Abrahams

Jim Abrahams

Jim Abrahams

(born 10 May 1944) is an American movie director and writer.

Abrahams was born in Shorewood, Wisconsin, and attended Shorewood High School there.He is known for the spoof movies that he co-wrote and produced with brothers Jerry Zucker and David Zucker, such as Airplane! (for which he was nominated for a BAFTA Award for Best Screenplay) and The Naked Gun series. The team of Zucker, Abrahams and Zucker (also referred to as “ZAZ”) really began when the three men grew up together in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Abrahams later produced movies on his own such as Big Business, and further honed his skills in parody with Hot Shots! and its 1993 sequel Hot Shots! Part Deux.

He now lives in Eagle River, Wisconsin.

 

Richard Donner

Richard Donner

 

Richard Donner (born 24 April 1930) is an American film director, film producer, and comic book writer. The production company The Donners’ Company is owned by Donner and his wife, producer Lauren Shuler Donner. After directing the horror film The Omen, Donner became famous for the hailed creation of the first modern superhero film, Superman, starring Christopher Reeve. The influence of this film eventually helped establish the superhero concept as a respected film genre. Donner later reinvigorated the buddy film genre with Lethal Weapon and its sequels.

In 2000, he received the President’s Award from the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films. He was also nominated for Best Director in 1978 for Superman. Film historian Michael Barson writes that Donner had “emerged as one of Hollywood’s most reliable makers of action blockbusters.”

 

 

Trade Mark:

 

Frequently casts Mel Gibson.

Frequently casts Steve Kahan.

Features human free-fall stunts in nearly all his films

Long shots looking at actors through gaps in scenery or between other actors in the scene

Shots from waist level or below looking up at actors.

Frequently casts Danny Glover.

Movies have a glossy look or feel to them.

 

Trivia:

 

Frequently makes uncredited appearances in his own movies.

Originally, Donner directed Superman (1978) and Superman II (1980) back to back, then cut back on filming the sequel to focus on finishing the first one for a Christmas release. A clash with the producers, the Salkinds, over the material led to Donner being fired before he could finish filming the second one and he was replaced with Richard Lester. Donner later estimated that he had directed 80% of the sequel and saw about 50% of his work in the theatrical film.

Kept both One-Eyed Willie’s head and a model for the ship from The Goonies (1985). Aside from directing the film , he has an uncredited cameo as one of the sheriffs on the quads as the Goonies exit the cave with the ship. He’s the one with the gray hair. Producer Steven Spielberg instructed the cast members to act cold and distant toward Donner on the last week of filming which puzzled him. Shortly after filming wrapped, Donner went to his beach house in Hawaii, ran into a frenzied neighbor who took up his entire day. When he arrived home, the entire cast was there with Donner to celebrate with a cookout. Spielberg flew them over to Hawaii on the promise that they not speak a word of the surprise to Donner, which prompted them to act the way they were on the last week of filming.

Actor Steve Kahan is his cousin. Kahan has appeared in 12 of his movies.

Was actively pursued by Michael Crichton to direct Jurassic Park (1993).

Was asked to direct the fourth Superman film (Superman IV: The Quest for Peace (1987)), and considered it alongside Tom Mankiewicz, who had been the writer of the first two Superman films, but ultimately both Donner and Mankiewicz declined, as they had other projects to deal with at the time.

Was considered to direct the first Batman film (Batman (1989)), and had actor Mel Gibson in mind for the role of Batman.

Was offered the job of directing Never Say Never Again (1983) but turned it down according to the book “The Films of Sean Connery” by Philip Lisa and Lee Pfeiffer.

Co-producer of the X-Men films directed by Bryan Singer, who later directed Superman Returns (2006), a little more than 30 years after Donner himself directed the first Superman (1978) film.

Turned down the offer to direct Alien³ (1992).

Lives in Beverly Hills and Los Angeles, California.

Francis Ford Coppola

Francis Ford Coppola

Francis Ford Coppola (born April 7, 1939) is an Italian-American film director, producer and screenwriter. Away from show business, Coppola is also a vintner, magazine publisher and hotelier. He is a graduate of Hofstra University where he studied theatre. He earned an M.F.A. in film directing from the UCLA Film School. He is primarily known for directing the Godfather films, The Conversation and Apocalypse Now. He is immediately recognisable by his luxuriant beard.

Trivia:

 

Caught polio when he was a child. During his quarantine, he practiced puppetry.

Some sources say he is the uncle of Alan Coppola, but Alan’s name does not appear on any family tree authorized by the Coppola family.

Like Martin Scorsese, Coppola was a sickly youth, a case of polio which allowed him time to indulge in puppet theater and home movies.

Brother of Talia Shire.

Father of Sofia Coppola, Roman Coppola and Gian-Carlo Coppola.

Son of composer Carmine Coppola and Italia Coppola.

Received an M.F.A. in Film Production from the University of California in Los Angeles (1967).

Since 1978, owner and operator of a Rutherford, California vineyard making Rubicon wine.

Coppola began his winery enterprise by buying portion of historic Inglenook estate in 1975. His success in field is explored in book “A Sense of Place” by Steven Kolpan, 1999.

Brother-in-law of Bill Neil.

Was in the early stages of developing a script for a fourth Godfather film with Mario Puzo which was to tell the story of the early lives of Sonny, Fredo and Michael. After Puzo’s death in July of 1999, Coppola abandoned the project, stating that he couldn’t do it without his friend.

As of May 2002, the number of Coppola-family members appearing in or contributing to filmmaking stands at thirteen, spread over three generations.

Francis Ford Coppola has been in competition with Bob Fosse on several occasions. In 1972, Coppola was nominated for the Best Director Oscar (The Godfather (1972)), but lost to Fosse (Cabaret (1972)). In 1974, Fosse was nominated for Best Director (Lenny (1974)) but lost to Coppola (The Godfather: Part II (1974)). In 1979, both were nominated as directors (Apocalypse Now (1979) and All That Jazz (1979)), but both lost. When Fosse won the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival (Coppola won the previous year), he tied with Akira Kurosawa, whose movie was produced by George Lucas and Francis Ford Coppola.

Grandfather of Gia Coppola. Great-uncle of Weston Coppola Cage.

Has released his own line of specialty foods.

As a child, his bedroom was covered with pictures of his favourite film star, Jane Powell. When he discovered she’d married Geary Anthony Steffen, Jr., he tore them all down.

His wife arranged for him to meet Jane Powell as a 40th birthday present.

Out of all his peers who rose to fame and power in the 1970s “Golden Age” era, he is perhaps the only filmmaker still married to his first wife.

Made a commercial for Suntory whiskey with legendary Japanese director Akira Kurosawa in the 1970s, an event which later influenced a salient plot point in his daughter Sofia’s movie, Lost in Translation (2003).

Was voted the 21st Greatest Director of all time by Entertainment Weekly.

Biography in: John Wakeman, editor. “World Film Directors, Volume Two, 1945- 1985″. Pages 227-234. New York: The H.W. Wilson Company, 1988.

George Lucas said that he based the “Han Solo” character from the Star Wars trilogy on Coppola.

Serves as the Honorary Ambassador of the Central American nation of Belize in San Francisco, California, USA. On their official roster of worldwide honorary consulates found on their official website, he is referred to as “His Excellency Ambassador Francis Ford Coppola,” although he is not a Belizean citizen.

In 1971 and 1973, George C. Scott and Marlon Brando refused their respective Best Actor awards for Patton (1970) and The Godfather (1972) – both written by Coppola.

Four of his relatives have been involved in the Star Wars films of his friend George Lucas. His brother-in-law, Bill Neil, worked at Industrial Light and Magic during the production of the original trilogy. His daughter, Sophia, and son, Roman, played a handmaiden and Naboo guard, respectively, in Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace (1999). His nephew, Christopher Neil, who worked as a dialogue coach for both Francis (on Jack (1996) and The Rainmaker (1997) and Sophia (on The Virgin Suicides (1999)), did the same job on Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith (2005)–a job for which Coppola recommended him. In addition, his late older son was named Gian-Carlo. In Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace (1999), there is a Naboo vehicle called the Gian Speeder.

Directed 12 different actors in Oscar-nominated performances: Geraldine Page, Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, James Caan, Robert Duvall, Robert De Niro, Michael V. Gazzo, Lee Strasberg, Talia Shire, Kathleen Turner, Andy Garcia and Martin Landau. Brando and De Niro won their Oscar for their performances as Vito Corleone.

In 1975, he accepted the Oscar for “Best Actor in a Supporting Role” on behalf of Robert De Niro, who wasn’t present at the awards ceremony. De Niro won for his performance in Coppola’s The Godfather: Part II (1974).

The only person to direct a sibling in an Oscar-nominated performance (his sister Talia Shire was nominated as “Best Actress in a Supporting Role” for The Godfather: Part II (1974))

President of jury at the Cannes Film Festival in 1996

He is among an elite group of seven directors who have won Best Picture, Best Director and Best Screenplay (Original/Adapted) for the same film. In 1975 he won all three for The Godfather: Part II (1974). The others are Leo McCarey, Billy Wilder, James L. Brooks, Peter Jackson and Joel Coen and Ethan Coen (the brothers co-produced, co-directed and co-wrote No Country for Old Men (2007) with each other).

Co-owns the Rubicon restaurant in San Francisco with Robert De Niro and fellow Bay area resident Robin Williams.

Was involved in both movies that his father and his daughter won Oscars: He was the director of The Godfather: Part II (1974)which won his father an Oscar for “Best Music, Original Dramatic Score” and he was the executive producer of Lost in Translation (2003) which won his daughter the Oscar for “Best Writing, Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen”.

There are three generations of Oscar winners in the Coppola family: Francis, his father Carmine Coppola, his nephew Nicolas Cage and his daughter Sofia Coppola. They are the second family to do so, the first family is the Hustons – Anjelica Huston, John Huston and Walter Huston.

Since the mid-90s (and possibly even earlier), he has been writing and re- writing an original screenplay entitled “Megalopolis”. Described as “one man’s quest to build utopia set in modern-day New York,” the project has been delayed due to Coppola’s constant tinkering with the script and the fact that the director is attempting to finance it himself. Several A-list actors have had their names attached to it and a great excess of second-unit footage (shot in 24p HD) has been captured by Coppola and the film’s cinematographer, Ron Fricke of Baraka (1992) fame.

Currently owns 2 resorts in Belize and 1 in Guatemala. They are the Blancaneaux Lodge in the Pine Ridge Region, Turtle Inn in Placencia and La Lancha near Tikal in Guatemala.

He, George Lucas and Steven Spielberg presented Martin Scorsese with his first ever Oscar for Best Director for The Departed (2006). All four directors were part of the “New Hollywood” movement in the 60s and 70s.

Brother of August Coppola.

Was named after his grandfather Francesco Pennino.

Uncle of Nicolas Cage, Christopher Coppola, Marc Coppola, Robert Schwartzman, Jason Schwartzman, ‘John Schwartzman (I)’, Matthew Shire and Stephanie Schwartzman.

Briefly attended the New York Military Academy where Troy Donahue was his classmate. They later worked together on The Godfather: Part II (1974).

His middle name was given to him to honor Henry Ford. Francis was born at the “Henry Ford” Hospital in Detroit; Francis’s father participated in a music show that Henry Ford really liked and they, in fact, met. So the middle name Ford was to honor Henry Ford himself. (Source: Francis Ford Coppola, “Inside the Actor’s Studio”).

As a hold-over from his days directing theater when he was young, he always engages his cast in a lengthy rehearsal period before filming. Occasionally, he finds film actors that are not used to this will bristle against the process.

In 1986 his 22-year-old son, Gian-Carlo, died in a boating accident.

Favorite movies from his own personal filmography: The Rain People (1969), The Conversation (1974), Apocalypse Now (1979), Rumble Fish (1983) and Youth Without Youth (2007).

Is a big fan of actress Diane Lane and has cast her in no less than 4 films, The Outsiders (1983), Rumble Fish (1983), The Cotton Club (1984) and Jack (1996).

Won five Oscars in four years – one in 1971 for Patton (1970), one in 1973 for The Godfather (1972), and three in 1975 for The Godfather: Part II (1974).

Has an IQ of 117.

 

barry-sonnenfeld

Barry Sonnenfeld

Barry Sonnenfeld (born April 1, 1953) is an American filmmaker and television director. He worked as cinematographer for the Coen Brothers, then later he directed and produced big budget films such as Men in Black.

Trivia:

 

Was uninjured when a private jet he was travelling in collided with five empty ‘planes after a rough landing in Van Nuys, California. [16 February 1999]

Started his career as a cinematographer in porn films. He’s quoted in the January 26, 1998 Newsweek magazine (page 60) saying that he was depressed when he heard that Boogie Nights (1997) was being made (a film about making pornos) because he had wanted to make a movie about the time he shot 9 feature length pornos in nine days.

NYU Film School Assistant to Elliott Erwitt.

Lives in Long Island, NY.

Loves to eat smoked whitefish.

Was offered the job of directing Forrest Gump (1994), but declined. The job then went to Robert Zemeckis, who won an Academy Award for it.

Has a private bathroom designed to look like a public bathroom, complete with stalls and urinals in his house in New York.

One of his most embarrassing moments occurred when he was a teenager attending his first rock concert. His mom had the PA announcer say, “Barry Sonnenfeld, call your mother.”

Nephew of Vaudeville and screen comedian Gus Schilling, whose voice likeness he inherited genetically.

Father of Chloe Sonnenfeld.

Has stated in many interviews that before making Men in Black he was considering doing a live-action film version of The Jetsons. With Jim Carrey playing George Jetson and Nicole Kidman playing Jane Jetson.

Was set to direct “Fun with Dick and Jane” (2005), but bowed out citing personal reasons.

Was at one time attached to direct The Heartbreak Kid (2007).

 

from Hollywood Reporter    Source(s) Rueters

edison-Frankenstein-1910-poster
Thursday (March 18) marks the 100th anniversary of the American movie industry’s first attempt to bring “Frankenstein” to the big screen with a long-forgotten film made by Thomas Edison’s studio.

The centennial comes on the heels of recent news about a production based on Dean Koontz’s “Frankenstein” books, as well as the publication of Frederick C. Wiebel, Jr.’s book “Edison’s Frankenstein.”


While visiting his in-laws in Minneapolis 20 years ago, Wiebel happened to see a clip from the long-lost film on TV.

“I was astounded that any of it existed,” he said. “It had been 30 or 40 years since I’d first heard of the movie.”

Intending to write a magazine article about it, Wiebel began researching the film.

“I just kept getting more and more information until at some point it was too long for an article and too short for a book.”

Ultimately, he found enough material to write a book about filming “Frankenstein” as well as about how movies were made in the early 1900s. He also discovered the film’s one surviving print and arranged for its restoration and release on DVD.

When Edison shot his one-reel version of “Frankenstein” in January 1910, Mary Shelley’s novel was already 92 years’ old. It had been produced on stage for years and was already part of the culture through references like “creating a Frankenstein.”


As today’s movie marketers would say, “Frankenstein” had great brand awareness, so it made sense for Edison to bring it to life on screen.

“It took them three or four days to shoot it,” Wiebel noted, which was a little longer than usual.

“What they would do mostly would be to practice the whole film and try to do it, if they could, in one take. They’d rehearse it until they finally got it down and then they would roll the cameras.”

Wiebel said budgets back then were calculated in price per foot — about 50 cents a foot in 1910. The 13-minute “Frankenstein” ran 976 feet, which works out to about $488. But Wiebel said the film had a lot of special effects so it would have cost more.

“They probably spent more making the dummy,” he added, referring to the scene where Dr. Frankenstein creates his monster.

“They made what looks like a papier-mache dummy with a skeleton inside. They either turned the camera upside-down or were cranking backwards so that what came out on the screen would come forward.”

We see Frankenstein throw some chemicals in a cauldron, whose contents catch fire. From these ashes and flames the creature comes together by reversing the footage of the burning dummy.

“Frankenstein,” directed by James Searle Dawley, featured Edison stock players Charles Ogle as the monster, Augustus Phillips as Frankenstein and Mary Fuller as his bride.

Dawley isn’t remembered today despite having been one of Edison’s top filmmakers.

He’d been working with a theatrical stock company in Brooklyn and one of his jobs was renting films to show between theatrical performances. By doing that he met people working for Edison and wound up being offered a job making movies there.

“He got to meet Edwin Porter, who was Edison’s main director at the time,” Wiebel said.

Porter pioneered what evolved into basic filmmaking techniques like cross-cutting and using close-ups instead of full-length body shots. In his 1903 hit “The Great Train Robbery,” Porter showed a close-up of a gun being fired directly at the audience. The terrified moviegoers had never seen anything like this before.

Director D.W. Griffith started out working as an actor for Porter and learned much about moviemaking and film editing from him.

Porter took Dawley on because the theater veteran was good at blocking scenes and directing performances. Porter put him to work doing just that, allowing Porter to do what he enjoyed most — directing action sequences.

Actors were typically paid $5 a day in 1910, which was a pretty good salary then.

“There really weren’t named stars at the time,” Wiebel pointed out. “That developed a few years later. That’s why a lot of theatrical people didn’t want to do movies — because they wouldn’t get any credit for their work.”

Stage actors also looked down on movies because mostly they were shown in a vaudeville setting or thrown in to fill time between plays presented by local theater groups.

Working in Edison’s favor was the fact that its studio in the Bronx was just far enough north of Manhattan so that actors who journeyed uptown to work in movies didn’t risk being seen by their friends.

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Wolfgang Petersen

Wolfgang Petersen

Wolfgang Petersen (born 14 March 1941) is a German film director. He is known for his body of film work, which includes The NeverEnding Story, Outbreak, In the Line of Fire, Air Force One, The Perfect Storm, Troy, and Poseidon. He was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Director and an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay for the 1981 World War II submarine warfare film Das Boot.

Trivia:

Is fluent in English and German.

Received “Bayerischer Verdienstorden” (Bavaria’s highest decoration) on 17 July 2003.

Broke into the entertainment industry in 1960 with the Hamburg Ernest Deutsch Theater as an assistant director.

Got to know his second wife during the shooting of Smog (1973) (TV), where she worked as a script girl.

Father of Daniel Petersen.

Attended the Film and Television Academy in Berlin (DFFB) from 1966 to 1970.

Was offered the chance to direct “The Sum of All Fears” (2002), but declined.

creature_from_the_black_lagoon 1954

Creature from the Black Lagoon is a 1954 American monster film directed by Jack Arnold, and starring Richard Carlson, Julia Adams, Richard Denning, Antonio Moreno, and Whit Bissell. The eponymous creature was played by Ben Chapman on land and Ricou Browning in underwater scenes. The film was released in the United States on March 5 1954.

Creature from the Black Lagoon was filmed and originally released in 3-D requiring polarized 3-D glasses, and subsequently reissued in the 1970s in the inferior anaglyph format (this version was released on home video by MCA Videocassette, Inc. in 1980). It is considered a classic of the 1950s, and generated two sequels, Revenge of the Creature and The Creature Walks Among Us, each a year apart. Revenge of the Creature was also filmed and released in 3-D, in hopes of reviving the format.

Trivia:

 

  • Ricou Browning, a professional diver and swimmer, was required to hold his breath for up to 4 minutes at a time for his underwater role as the “Gill Man.” The director’s logic was that the air would have to travel through the monster’s gills and thus not reveal air bubbles from his mouth or nose. Thus, the costume was designed without an air tank. In the subsequent films, this detail was ignored and air can be seen emanating from the top of the creature’s head.
  • In this film, the eyes of the Creature were a fixed part of the rubber construction of the suit. The actors who played the part of the “Gill Man” could barely see, if at all. In the second film, the eyes have been, somewhat ludicrously, replaced with large, bulbous fish-eyes to assist in the actor’s vision.
  • Jenny Clack (University of Cambridge) discovered a fossil amphibian, found in the remnants of what was once a fetid swamp and named it Eucritta melanolimnetes – literally “the creature from the black lagoon”.
  • When William Alland was a member of Orson Welles’ Mercury Theatre, he heard famed Mexican cinematographer Gabriel Figueroa tell of a legend about a humanoid creature that supposedly lived in South America. That legend became the origin of this film.
  • The Creature, using the name “Uncle Gilbert”, appeared in an episode of the TV series “The Munsters” (1964) The episode is titled “Love Comes to Mockingbird Heights.”
  • The physical appearance of the Creature was modeled after a likeness of the Oscar, the figurine awarded annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
  • Two different stuntmen were used to portray the creature and therefore two different suits were used in the movie. Ricou Browning played the creature when it was in the water and wore a lighter suit. Ben Chapman played the creature when it was out of the water with a darker suit.
  • Milicent Patrick created the design of the Creature, although Bud Westmore, who was the head of Universal’s makeup department at the time, would take credit publicly for the Creature’s design.
  • When the Creature attacks Zee, the script called for him to pick him up and throw him into the camera for the 3-D effect. Unfortunately, the wires used to lift Zee up to make it appear as though he was actually being picked up by the Creature kept breaking. After two tries, Jack Arnold decided to just have Zee get strangled to death.
  • Originally produced in 3-D.
  • The Creature’s appearance was based on old seventeenth-century woodcuts of two bizarre creatures called the Sea Monk and the Sea Bishop. The Creature’s final head was based on that of the Sea Monk, but the original discarded head was based on that of the Sea Bishop. In one sequence Julie Adams’ character is captured by the creature and carried into a cave. During the filming the stuntman misjudged where the side of the entrance was and accidentally struck Ms. Adams’ head against the wall, knocking her unconscious.
  • Historically, the first script for this film was commissioned by Adolf Hitler in Germany. The script was to depict a ‘Golem’ that comes out of a swamp and kills ‘Good’ Germans. The script was 60 percent the same as the finished American universal film.
  • Ingmar Bergman watched this film every day on his birthday.
  • Originally titled simply: “The Black Lagoon”.
  • Jean Renoir was an uncredited script doctor on this film.

 

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