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David Fincher

  • Born: May 10, 1962
  • Occupation: Director
  • Active: '90s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Thriller
  • Career Highlights: Seven, Alien ³, Fight Club
  • First Major Screen Credit: Twice Upon a Time (1983)

Biography

With only a handful of credits tucked under his belt, wunderkind prodigy David Fincher became one of the most celebrated artists to scale the heights of Tinseltown during the late '90s and early 2000s. Although Fincher met with some derision early on, as the director of the critically excoriated Alien 3 in 1992, his work on Seven three years down the road won him critical approval and unanimous acceptance across the industry, and marked only the beginning of an influential, splashy career.

Born on May 10, 1962, Fincher originally hailed from Denver. Like one of his predecessors, the infamous Kenneth Anger, he stepped behind a camera at the tender age of eight and, particularly inspired by the work of George Lucas, reeled in his first major industry job ten years later at Lucas' own Industrial Light and Magic. After his four-year stint at ILM, during which he worked on such productions as Return of the Jedi (1983) and Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (1984), Fincher helmed commercials and music videos for the likes of Aerosmith, Paula Abdul, and Madonna. Following the disappointment of Alien 3, his directorial debut, the filmmaker received Andrew Kevin Walker's screenplay for Seven, and almost immediately signed on to helm it; it reached cinemas in late 1995. A noirish, grimly atmospheric crime thriller starring Morgan Freeman and Brad Pitt as detectives following the gruesome trail of a serial killer (Kevin Spacey), innumerable critics hailed the picture as one of the most innovative and unsettling of the decade, and duly established its director as one of Hollywood's most exciting and unusual new talents. Relentlessly grim and oozing with rancid cynicism, this A-budget feature strayed so far from the escapist fare that typically primes a film for mainstream box-office success that many insiders anticipated limited appeal, but Fincher's stylistic panache and inhibition-defying gutsiness turned Seven into a runaway smash, on both commercial and critical fronts. Because the acclaim surrounding Seven made the relatively unknown Fincher one of Hollywood's hottest young directors, considerable anticipation and buzz surrounded his follow-up, The Game. Released in 1997 and starring Michael Douglas as a soulless attorney who becomes caught up in the sinister, Kafka-esque machinations of the titular scheme, the work boasted almost as much feel-bad cynicism as Seven, but failed to resonate with audiences or critics who found it hopelessly convoluted and shallow.

The relative disappointment of The Game, however, did little to dim the excitement that accompanied Fincher's next project, a screen adaptation of Chuck Palahniuk's apocalyptic, of-the-moment novel Fight Club. Featuring a sterling cast that included Edward Norton, Helena Bonham Carter, and Seven collaborator Pitt, the 1999 film -- about a couple of depressed urban loners (Norton and Pitt), who vent their aggressions in ultra-violent street brawls -- was easily one of the most publicized of the decade and no less dynamic than either of Fincher's prior films. Fueled in equal measure by stylistic audacity and the spirit of disenfranchised machismo, Fight Club failed to become the incendiary hit both its fans and detractors predicted, although its pre-millennial nihilism influenced directors for years to come and garnered a passionate cult fan base. In spite (or perhaps because) of Fight Club, expectations were high for Fincher's next project, Panic Room, a thriller starring Jodie Foster, Jared Leto, Forest Whitaker, and Dwight Yoakam, and penned by the prolific David Koepp (Bad Influence, Carlito's Way). As pure an exercise in suspense as could be expected from the director, the film ratcheted up tension as it told the tale of a newly single Manhattan mother (Foster) and her diabetic daughter (Kristen Stewart) who use a high-tech "safe space" to protect themselves from a particularly nasty trio of burglars. Calling to mind the brutality of Peckinpah, Panic Room was greeted by positive reviews and a healthy box-office take, and marked a successful return to the big screen for the two-years-dormant Foster. Dormancy would characterize Fincher's career in the five years following Panic Room, although his name would be bandied about in association with a slew of high-profile projects (including Mission: Impossible III and the feature-film adaptation of Lords of Dogtown). When he finally returned in 2007, it was with Zodiac, a period thriller that resembled, at least on the surface, his Seven salad days. Pairing the director with such young, in-demand performers as Jake Gyllenhaal and Mark Ruffalo to tell the true story of the cryptic serial killer who terrorized the San Francisco Bay area in the early '70s, the highly anticipated project was given a March berth similar to that of Panic Room.

As Fincher made the media rounds for Zodiac, he was deep into production on the New Orleans-set The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, an adaptation of the F. Scott Fitzgerald story of the same name that reunited him with Brad Pitt, and co-starred Pitt's onscreen spouse from Babel, Cate Blanchett. ~ Rebecca Flint, All Movie Guide

 
 
Wikipedia: David Fincher
David Fincher
Image:Fincher0334.jpg
Birth name David Leo Fincher
Born August 28 1962 (1962--) (age 45)
Flag of the United States Denver, Colorado, U.S.
Years active 1984 - present
Spouse(s) Donya Fiorentino (1990-1995)

David Leo Fincher (born August 28, 1962) is an American music video and film director known for his dark and stylish films, particularly Fight Club and Se7en.

Early life and career

Born in Denver, Colorado, Fincher was raised in Marin County, California. He moved to Ashland, Oregon in his teens where he graduated from Ashland High School.

Inspired by Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Fincher began making movies at age eight with an 8 mm camera. Filmmaking seemed the perfect outlet for a kid who could spend all day drawing and loved to make sculptures, take pictures and tape-record. Fincher eschewed the film school route, getting a job loading cameras and doing other hands-on work for John Korty's Korty Films. He next got a job at Industrial Light and Magic in 1980 with his first screen credit being for Return of the Jedi, and stayed until 1984. He left ILM to direct a dark commercial for the American Cancer Society, a grim hint of things to come, showing a fetus smoking a cigarette. This quickly brought Fincher to the attention of producers in LA and he got the chance to direct the documentary The Beat of the Live Drum featuring Rick Springfield in 1985. Though he would continue to direct spots for companies like Revlon, Converse, Nike, Pepsi, Sony, and Levi's, Fincher soon discovered that the slightly expanded format of music videos was an even better place to try things out. He lived with and was married to Donya Fiorentino from 1990-1995, which whom had has a daughter.

Propaganda Films

With his sights set on a directing career, he joined the talent management and advertising and video-production company Propaganda Films and started off directing music videos and commercials. Directors such as Meiert Avis, David Kellogg, Michael Bay, Antoine Fuqua, Neil LaBute, Spike Jonze, Mark Romanek, Michel Gondry, Zack Snyder, Gore Verbinski, and Alex Proyas among others honed their talents at Propaganda before moving on to feature films.

Music videos

Fincher directed big budget music videos for artists such as Madonna (including "Express Yourself", "Vogue" "Oh Father" and "Bad Girl"), Billy Idol ("Cradle of Love"), Jody Watley, Rick Springfield, Steve Winwood, George Michael, Michael Jackson, Aerosmith, Paula Abdul, the Rolling Stones (including "Love Is Strong"), Nine Inch Nails ("Only"), the Wallflowers, The Outfield and A Perfect Circle ("Judith"), as well as commercials. Like a number of other music video directors, he then moved into film.

Features

Alien³

Fincher's feature debut was Alien³ (1992), which was then the most expensive picture ever made by a first time director. Unfortunately the film was not a pleasant experience for Fincher, having had a difficult time with the people at 20th Century Fox, who built sets without a finished script and made production a nightmare. While it received an Oscar nomination for special effects, the film was not well received by critics or movie goers. Depressed and disillusioned, Fincher retreated back into the world of commercial and music video directing, earning a Grammy for the Rolling Stones' "Love Is Strong" (1994). On the 9-disc Alien Quadrilogy box-set released in 2003, Fincher was the one director from the entire franchise who declined to participate in the box-set, even to record a commentary track. On the DVDs for Fight Club and Panic Room, if the user views Fincher's selected filmography, Alien³ is omitted.

Se7en

Fate finally came knocking on Fincher's door with Andrew Kevin Walker's screenplay for a grisly detective story titled Se7en (1995). The relentlessly grim story of two detectives (played in the movie by Brad Pitt and Morgan Freeman) tracking down a serial killer who bases his killings on the seven deadly sins. The movie grossed more than $100 million domestically (over $300 million internationally), making Fincher a "hot" director. The chairman of New Line Cinema, Arnold Kopelson, originally refused to allow filming of the shocking climactic scene before Fincher convinced him otherwise. He argued that the scene was such a crucial part of Se7en, that 30 years later, someone flipping through the channels on late night TV would run to tell his friends about the "head in a box" movie he'd seen the night before -- it being the one crucial element that would stick in the minds of all who saw it.

The Game

Next came the dark adventure film, The Game (1997), a nightmarish, Twilight Zone-style thriller which projected the same sense of suffocating enclosure and mounting despair as had Se7en. The film boasted almost as much feel-bad cynicism as Se7en, but failed to get the warm reception enjoyed by its predecessor. The story itself focuses on a closed off San Francisco businessman (Michael Douglas) who receives an unusual gift from his younger brother (Sean Penn), in which he becomes the main player of a roleplaying game that takes over his life. It has in recent years become a cult film.

Fight Club

Fight Club was a screen adaptation of Chuck Palahniuk's novel of the same name about an insomniac office worker who opens up a club devoted exclusively to bare knuckle fighting for males. Featuring Edward Norton, Helena Bonham Carter, and Se7en collaborator Brad Pitt, the 1999 film was easily one of the most publicized of the year but was an early disappointment at the box-office and received mixed reviews. Fight Club was panned by most critics (called "macho porn" by Roger Ebert) and alienated audiences leading to its box office failure in the United States.

However many critics and audiences later had a change of heart and the film appeared on many 'best of the year' lists and soon developed a following. Entertainment Weekly, which had originally given the film a negative grade of D, later ranked the DVD #1 on its list of "The Top 50 DVDs You Need To Own." The DVD market, which was experiencing rapid growth at the time, caused Fight Club to not only break even, but actually become profitable. It is now in the top 250 films of all time on IMDB, at number 28.

Panic Room

In 2002 he followed up with the thriller Panic Room, which introduced some innovative uses of computer graphics. Though the film had good gross at the box office, it was not as well received as Se7en, Fight Club or The Game. The story follows a more conventional route for Fincher, as a single mother (Jodie Foster) and her daughter hide away in a safe room in their new house, away from criminals (Forest Whitaker, Dwight Yoakam and Fight Club collaborator Jared Leto) bent on finding a missing fortune.

Zodiac

Zodiac is an adaptation of Robert Graysmith's books about the hunt for the Zodiac Killer. The 2007 film stars Jake Gyllenhaal, Mark Ruffalo, Robert Downey Jr., Anthony Edwards, and Brian Cox. It was one of the best-reviewed films of 2007; however, it has so far struggled at the box office.

Future projects

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button

A fantasy film, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button is an adaptation of F Scott Fitzgerald's short story of the same name. The film will unite Fincher with Brad Pitt for the third time. The film started shooting in November 2006 in New Orleans. Both Zodiac and this film are co-productions of Paramount Pictures and Warner Bros. Pictures.

Torso

David Fincher is also attached to direct an adaptation of Brian Michael Bendis' graphic novel Torso, Jake Gyllenhaal is attached for the lead, reuniting with Fincher after Zodiac. Paramount Pictures have placed the film on the fast-track, with production to be completed before the impending 2008 Writers Guild, Directors Guild and Screen Actors Guild strike. [1]

Rendezvous with Rama

David Fincher has long been attached to do an adaptation of Arthur C. Clarke's 1972 sci-fi book, Rendezvous with Rama. It was brought to his attention by Se7en star Morgan Freeman, whose company, Revelations Entertainment has optioned it. The film was originally to have been made by PolyGram Filmed Entertainment, but after being bought out by Universal Pictures, the film has since moved over to Paramount Pictures (which currently has a joint venture with Universal for international distribution of the 2 studios' films, United International Pictures). It has since been in development.

Integrity

The production company Impacts Entertainment has optioned a story by Scott Corwon. The story had been in development with Paramount Pictures, but was picked-up by Impacts when the original option period expired. The project is currently in development with a target date for principal photography to commence in 2009. Like many of David Fincher's previous projects - most notably including The Game and Zodiac - the story is set in San Francisco, CA.


Filmography

Theatrical films

Music videos

Commercials

See also

Books

External links


 
 

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