Director, ScreenwriterBorn on 1964 |
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Openly gay 'Generation X' filmmaker Andrew Fleming acquired a reputation as a wunderkind shortly after leaving New York University's prestigious film school. The last of his three award-winning student films there, "P.P.T.", earned him a fellowship at Warner Bros., and he teamed with no less a producer than Gale Ann Hurd ("Terminator" 1984; "Aliens" 1986) for his feature directing and writing debut "Bad Dreams" (1988), a largely ignored psychological horror film. Although some found it stylish in a sort of David Cronenbergian way, many questioned Hurd's involvement in an "entertainment" so clearly celebrating doom and utterly devoid of hope, aimed shamelessly at the teen market. Prior to "Bad Dreams", Fleming's interests had primarily lain in the technical side of filmmaking, but after a hiatus to learn how to write, he resurfaced with his follow-up feature, "Threesome" (1994), an amusing coming-of-age college story. Boasting an attractive young cast (Lara Flynn Boyle, Stephen Baldwin and Josh Charles) caught up in a somewhat unconventional love triangle, the movie outstandingly and believably expressed the sex-saturated state-of-mind of 20-year-olds and represented a giant leap forward for the screenwriter. Solid tech contributions gave the independent feature the polished look of a bigger budget studio effort. The refreshingly unpretentious writer-director "nailed" the high school experience for "The Craft" (1996), a supernatural thriller and black-comedy clone of "Heathers" (1989), featuring four toothsome "witches" (Fairuza Balk, Robin Tunney, Neve Campbell, Rachel True) grounded in a realistic setting. Fleming's ship ran aground when it abdicated its strong narrative in favor of well-executed special effects, culminating in a showdown battle between Balk (in full-blown punk Medusa frenzy) and Tunney, the recent convert with a conscience. He continued in the high school milieu with "Dick" (1999), a period piece bringing two teenagers in contact with such Watergate era characters as President Nixon (Dan Hedaya), James Dean (Jim Breuer) and G. Gordon Liddy (Harry Shearer), among others. |
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Films Out Now
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(15)
Dir. Roland Emmerich Starring John Cusack, Chiwetel Ejiofor
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(PG)
Dir. Wes Anderson Starring George Clooney, Meryl Streep
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(U)
Dir. Pete Docter, Bob Peterson Starring Edward Asner, Jordan Nagai
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Disney's A Christmas Carol
Harry Brown
The Men Who Stare at Goats
Michael Jackson's This Is It
Jennifer's Body
An Education
Hannah Montana: The Movie
Cirque du Freak : The Vampire's Assistant
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
Ice Age 3: Dawn of the Dinosaurs
Bedtime Stories
Amelia
Bandslam
Bright Star
Monsters vs. Aliens
Saw 6
Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs
Julie & Julia
Aliens In The Attic
Taking Woodstock
Couples Retreat
9
Dead Man Running
Broken Embraces
The White Ribbon
The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus
Mesrine: Killer Instinct
Creation
Fame
Public Enemy Number One
Adventureland
Aladin
Cold Souls
Zombieland
Fish Tank
Dorian Gray
57 1Soloist
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Upcoming Films
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Dir. Oren Peli Starring Katie Featherston, Micah Sloat
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Dir. F. Gary Gray Starring Gerard Butler, Jamie Foxx
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Dir. Spike Jonze Starring Max Records, Catherine Keener
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Dir. Louis Leterrier Starring Sam Worthington, Gemma Arterton
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Dir. Jorge Blanco Starring Dwayne Johnson, Jessica Biel
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Dir. Clint Eastwood Starring Morgan Freeman, Matt Damon
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Dir. David Yates Starring Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson
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