- Wes Craven
Wesley Earl Craven (born August 2, 1939 in Cleveland, Ohio) is an American film director and writer best known as the creator of many horror films, including the famed "Nightmare on Elm Street" series featuring the redoubtable Freddy Krueger character. - Willie D. Burton
Willie D. Burton is an African-American sound editor, born in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. In 1988, he won the Academy Award for Sound for "Bird" and in 2006 for "Dreamgirls". He was nominated for the same award in 1978 for The Buddy Holly Story, in 1980 for Altered States, in 1983 for WarGames, in 1994 for The Shawshank Redemption, and in 1999 for Green Mile. He won a British Academy Award in 1983 for War Games. - Scott Hecker
Scott Hecker is an American Supervising Sound editor. He is the brother of foley walker Gary Hecker. - Christopher B. Reeves
Christopher Bennett Reeves is a television dialogue editor living in the Los Angeles area. He has been awarded two Emmy Awards for his work on The X-Files and has two (1992 and 2004) Golden Reel Awards from the MPSE. His wife, Gabrielle Reeves, is also a sound editor. - Erik Aadahl
Erik A. Aadahl (born September 16, 1976 in San Francisco) is an American television series editor of Scandinavian descent. Aadahl studied film at Yale and Stanford Universities and he took a full Trustee scholarship to USC's School of Cinematic Arts as a film production major, where he went on to supervise the Spielberg Scoring Stage. He graduated in 1998, and became the Editor Guild's youngest new member. - Sean Callery
Sean Callery is a Emmy winning film and television composer best known for writing the theme to the action/drama "24", a TV series for which he also composed 2 full soundtracks. A second soundtrack was also composed by him from various music from the 4th and 5th season and was released January '07. Other notable projects include the 2004 James Bond video game, "Everything or Nothing" and the television series "La Femme Nikita". - Jamie Selkirk
Jamie Selkirk is a film editor and producer most prominently known for his work on the The Lord of the Rings film trilogy. He served as co-producer for all three episodes, and as supervising editor for "The Fellowship of the Ring" and "The Two Towers". His work with Annie Collins on "The Return of the King" earned the film an Oscar for Best Editing in 2004. Selkirk collaborated with Peter Jackson on many of his prior films, … - Blake Leyh
Blake Leyh (born in Syracuse, New York in 1962) is a composer, sound designer, and music supervisor. Leyh's prominent credits include music supervising HBO's television show "The Wire", composing original scores for the films of Kirby Dick (including the Oscar-nominated "Twist of Faith" and "SICK: The Life & Death of Bob Flanagan, Supermasochist") and sound design for the films of Julie Taymor, Ang Lee, Spike Lee, John Waters, and James Cameron. - Peter Honess
Peter Honess is an ACE-certified film editor. He has edited up to thirty films, including "L.A. Confidential" (1997), "The Next Best Thing" (2000), "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets" (2002), "Troy" (2004), "Aeon Flux" (2005), and "Poseidon" (2006). He was nominated for an Academy Award for Film Editing in 1997 for his work in "L.A. Confidential" - Dody Dorn
Dody Dorn born 20 April 1955 (sometimes credited as Dody J. Dorn) is an Academy Award nominated American film and sound editor best known for working with director Christopher Nolan on several films including the post-modern, deconstructionist masterpiece about amnesia, "Memento". - Alan Splet
Alan Splet (1939-1995) was an Academy Award winning sound designer and sound editor. He worked on numerous film projects throughout his career, including Eraserhead, Dune, Blue Velvet and The Black Stallion for which he won the Oscar. He had a fruitful and lasting working relationship with the director David Lynch whom he worked with on many films. - Joakim Sundström
Joakim Sundström is a swedish sound editor, sound designer and musician. He was born in the Baltic city of Gävle in the north east of Sweden and was brought up in Buchanan, Liberia on the West African Atlantic coast. He currently lives and works in London, England where he is married to British painter Dee Ferris. He collaborates regularly with british director Michael Winterbottom; 24 Hour Party People (2002), In This World (2002), Code 46 (2003), 9 Songs (2004), … - William Gazecki
William Gazecki is a documentary filmmaker and sound mixer best known for his Academy Award-nominated film "Waco: The Rules of Engagement" (1997). The film, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, was also awarded the International Documentary Association's Distinguished Documentary Achievement Award and won awards at both the Melbourne International Film Festival and the Vancouver International Film Festival. - Wayne Allwine
Wayne Anthony Allwine (born February 7, 1947 in Los Angeles, California) is an American voice actor, a sound effects editor and foley artist for Walt Disney Studios and the current voice of Mickey Mouse, a role he assumed from Jimmy MacDonald. His first appearance as Mickey was voicing the animated lead-ins for "The New Mickey Mouse Club" in 1977. - Larry Fessenden
Larry Fessenden (born 1963, New York, New York) is a writer, director, and actor, living in New York City. He is president of Glass Eye Pix, an independent film production company based in New York City. He is known for his intelligent and socially conscious horror films. - Harry Snodgrass
Harry Snodgrass is a Supervisor sound editor, Sound Designer and Sound editor for film and television. Some of the films he has worked on are "Alien³", "Predator 2", "Robin Hood - Men in Tights", "American Pie", and "Napoleon Dynamite". He has been nominated for an Emmy Award for Sound four times. The character Atimus Snodgrass in the film "Sasquatch Dumpling Gang" was named because of the relationship he has with the filmmakers. - James Genn
James Douglas Genn is a filmmaker, writer and director, born in Vancouver, B.C. in 1972. He is the son of Canadian artist Robert Genn, the brother of musician Dave Genn, and is the twin brother to artist and musician Sara Genn. His work includes the Genie Award nominated short film "The Dog Walker", produced at the Canadian Film Centre in Toronto, Canada, where he completed a director's residency in 2003. His well-received work has screened at festivals around the world, … - Morton Tubor
Morton Tubor is an American film editor and sound editor. In both capacities, he worked mostly in low budget horror and exploitation films. As a film editor, he worked on Francis Ford Coppola's "Dementia 13" (1963), Jack Hill's "Switchblade Sisters" (1975), and Paul Bartel's "Cannonball" (1976), among other films. He also edited Samuel Fuller's relatively big budget "The Big Red One" (1980). - Robert Parrish
American film editor and director Robert Parrish (1916 - 1995) started off as a child actor from the late 1920s, making his film debut in John Ford's "Four Sons" in 1928. He also appeared in the anti-war classic "All Quiet on the Western Front" (1930) and Charles Chaplin's "City Lights" (1931). John Ford then enlisted him as an assistant editor in 1936 on "Mary of Scotland", and as a sound editor on "Young Mr Lincoln" three years later. - Anthony Sloman
Anthony Barney Sloman (born Waltham Abbey, Essex, 6 May 1945) is an English broadcaster, film critic, film director, film editor, film producer, lecturer, production manager, screenwriter, sound editor and actor. Tony Sloman is a respected cinema critic and historian, whose long career has encompassed many facets of film making. He has worked in the film and television industry since 1964, as an actor, director, editor, sound editor, production manager, … - Ernie Fosselius
Ernie Fosselius is an American filmmaker, best known for his classic "Star Wars" parody "Hardware Wars". After performing with the San Francisco band Earth Mother and The Final Solution, Fosselius' film career began in the early 1970’s when he co-created 20 original animated films for "Sesame Street". Fosselius is known for his satirical short films. One of the most notable, made in 1976 for "Mother's Little Network", … - Julien Poulin
Julien Poulin (born April 20, 1946) is an actor, film director, screenwriter, film producer, and composer in Quebec, Canada. His acting record consist of numerous roles in several popular Quebec films and shows. He is considered one of the most popular and successful actors in the province. - Edward Summer
Edward Summer has been an award winning painter, motion picture director, screenwriter, internet publisher, magazine editor, journalist and science writer, comic book writer, novelist, book designer, actor, cinematographer, motion picture editor, documentary film maker, film festival founder, and educator. Among his better known works are the ground-breaking collection of Carl Barks stories "Uncle Scrooge McDuck: His Life and Times", … - Donald Shebib
Donald Shebib (born 27 January 1938, Toronto) is a Canadian film director, writer, producer and editor. He gained prominence and critical acclaim in Canadian cinema for his 1970 movie "Goin' Down the Road". - Treg Brown
Tregoweth Edmond "Treg" Brown (November 4, 1899 - April 28, 1984) was a motion picture sound editor who was responsible for the sound effects in Warner Bros.' Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons starting in 1934. He also won the 1965 Academy Award for Sound Effects for his work on the film "The Great Race". Even though he was the sound man, producer Leon Schlesinger insisted that Brown be credited as "Film editor" instead, … - Oswald Hafenrichter
Yugoslavian born editor Oswald Hafenrichter (1899 - 1973) began his career with a series of German films in the early 30s and some Italian films in the mid 40s. He moved to England at the end of World War II and worked on some prestige British films of the time including "An Ideal Husband" in 1947, and two classic films for Carol Reed, "The Fallen Idol" in 1949 and "The Third Man" the following year, for which he received an Academy Award nomination. - Mark de Gli Antoni
Mark De Gli Antoni (b. San Francisco, California, June 20, 1962), often credited as Horse Tricks, is a New York / San Francisco composer, best known for his work as keyboard and sampler player for the band Soul Coughing from 1992 to 2000. De Gli Antoni has a master's degree in music composition from the Mannes College of Music in New York City. In the early 1990s, De Gli Antoni was a member, along with Eric Qin and Norman Yamada, … - Desmond Saunders
Desmond Saunders is a British television director and film editor. He has a long association with Gerry Anderson, having served as a director for the television series "Supercar", "Stingray", "Thunderbirds", "Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons", "Joe 90" and "Terrahawks". Saunders was also the production controller for "Joe 90" and co-wrote one of the show's episodes, "Lone-Handed 90". - Stan Brakhage
Stan Brakhage was an American non-narrative filmmaker. He is regarded as one of the most important experimental filmmakers of the 20th century. Brakhage was born as Robert Sanders in an orphanage in Kansas City, Missouri. Three weeks after his birth, he was adopted by Ludwig and Clara Brakhage, and he was given the name James Stanley Brakhage. As a child, he appeared on radio as a boy soprano before going to high school in Denver, … - Rolfe Kanefsky
Rolfe Kanefsky is an American film writer/director. Kanefsky grew up in the suburbs of New York and attended Hampshire College where he studied Film. He began writing stories at a young age after his childhood dream of becoming a clown took the backseat to his interest in film. By the time he was twenty-one, Rolfe had written and directed the original cult classic horror spoof "There's Nothing Out There". - Veikko Aaltonen
Veikko Aaltonen is a Finnish director, editor, sound editor, production manager and film and television writer and actor. Aaltonen has had a long history of contributing to Finnish film and was briefly an actor in the 1980s. He produced and acted in Talvisota in 1989, a popular Finnish war film about the Russian invasion of Finland. Most of Aaltonen's work over the last decade has been in television. - Pekka Karjalainen
Pekka Karjalainen is a Finnish film director and sound producer. He gained worldwide fame by producing the movie "Hysteria". It won the Grand Prix at the Stockholm International Film Festival in 1993 and was nominated for an Academy Award in the Best Foreign Language Film category in 1994. - José Luis Garci
José Luis Garci is a director, producer, writer, and actor in Spanish cinema. Garci gained early experience in cinema by writing scripts and acting. He made his directorial debut in 1970 with "El cronicón". After a relative success in one dozen of movies, in 1977 the moviegoers were impressed with "Asignatura pendiente" (aka "Unfinished Business"). - Clint Bajakian
Clint Bajakian is an American video game soundtrack composer. He worked for LucasArts until 2000 when he formed his own sound production company, C.B. Studios. He has worked on several classic LucasArts games, where he gained much of his fame. Recently, he has ventured into working with other publishers as well as writing the score for a short film, The Upgrade. - Pierre Falardeau
Pierre Falardeau (born on December 28, 1946 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada) is a Quebec film and documentary director, intellectual, pamphleteer and noted activist for Quebec independence. - Shirish Kunder
Shirish Kunder is an Indian editor and film director working in the Hindi Film Industry, also popularly known as Bollywood. - Faith Hubley
Faith Hubley (16 September 1924 - 7 December 2001) was an Academy Award-winning animator, known for her experimental work both in collaboration with her husband John Hubley, and on her own following John's death. - Michael Maclaverty
Michael MacLaverty (1904 - 1992) was an Irish writer of novels and short stories. He was born in County Monaghan and then moved to Belfast where he worked as a teacher. For a short period he lived on Rathlin Island, off the County Antrim coast. In the 1960s he was the principal of St. Thomas' Secondary School on the Whiterock Road in the upper Falls Road area of West Belfast. During his tenure there Seamus Heaney was one of his staff. - Werner Schroeter
Werner Schroeter (born April 7 1945 in Georgenthal, Thuringia) is a German film director, considered, together with Rainer Werner Fassbinder, one of the most important of his country in the post-war period. His 1980 film "Palermo oder Wolfsburg", telling the story of a Sicilian guest worker in Germany, won the Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival. Schroeter has also worked as a theater and opera director, in Germany and elsewhere. - Jeff Tymoschuk
Jeff Tymoschuk is a Vancouver based composer for film, television, and videogames. Jeff has written music for "Pursuit Force: Extreme Justice" for BigBig Games/Sony Computer Entertainment Europe, the James Bond franchise of games from Electronic Arts ("James Bond: Nightfire", and additional music on" James Bond: Everything or Nothing", supplementing 24 composer Sean Callery’s score), …
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