Cary Fukunaga
Cary Fukunaga | |
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Cary Fukunaga at the 28th Tokyo International Film Festival
Cary Fukunaga at the 28th Tokyo International Film Festival
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Born | Cary Joji Fukunaga July 10, 1977 Oakland, California, U.S. |
Residence | New York City, New York, U.S. |
Education | Grenoble Institute of Political Studies |
Alma mater | University of California, Santa Cruz Tisch School of the Arts |
Occupation | Director Writer Cinematographer |
Years active | 2003–present |
Cary Joji Fukunaga (born July 10, 1977)[1] is an American film director, writer, and cinematographer. He is known for writing and directing the 2009 film Sin Nombre, the 2011 film Jane Eyre and for directing and executive producing the first season of the HBO series True Detective, for which he won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series. He has received acclaim for the 2015 war drama Beasts of No Nation, in which Fukunaga was writer, director, producer, and cinematographer.[2]
Contents
Early life
Fukunaga was born in Oakland, California, the son of a third-generation Japanese-American father, Anthony Shuzo Fukunaga, born in a Japanese internment camp during World War II,[3] who worked for a generator company and later for the University of California, Berkeley; and a Swedish-American mother, Gretchen May Grufman,[4][5][6] who worked as a dental hygienist and later as a history teacher.[7] His parents divorced and remarried, his father to an Argentine woman, and his mother to a Mexican-American.[5]
Fukunaga said that his uncles and aunts are all elementary school teachers or scientists.[7] His family moved around a lot within the San Francisco Bay Area, moving to Berkeley, Albany, Vallejo, Benicia, Sebastopol and back to Oakland.[6]
Fukunaga originally wanted to be a pro snowboarder, but switched to filmmaking in his mid-twenties.[8] He got his start as a camera intern and later applied to film school.[9] He graduated from the University of California, Santa Cruz with a Bachelor of Arts in history in 1999,[10][11] and attended Institut d'études politiques (IEP) de Grenoble. He enrolled in New York University's Tisch School of the Arts Graduate Film Program.[12][13]
Career
Short films
Fukunaga wrote and directed the short film Victoria para Chino (2004) while at NYU, which screened at the Sundance Film Festival and received a Student Academy Award in 2005.[14] The film won an Audience Award for Best Narrative Student Short film at the 2004 Austin Film Festival, a "Best Student Film" award at the 2006 Ashland Independent Film Festival, a "BAFTA/LA Award for Excellence – Honorable Mention" award at the 2005 Aspen Shortsfest, Best Student Film at the 2005 BendFilm Festival, Best Short Film and an Audience Award for Best Short Film at the 2005 Gen Art Film Festival, Best Short film at the 2005 Milan International Film Festival, and the Jury Prize for Best Student Short at the 2004 Woodstock Film Festival.
He wrote and directed the short films Kofi (2008) (shot in black and white) and more recently, Sleepwalking in the Rift (2012). Fukunaga wrote and directed a segment in the omnibus film project "Chinatown Film Project" (2009).
Feature films
Sin Nombre
Fukunaga made his feature film debut with Sin Nombre, which he wrote and directed. It received positive reviews.[15][16] The film received a number of awards, including the Directing award at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival and a "New Director's Award" for Fukunaga at the 2009 Edinburgh International Film Festival. The film won "Best Foreign Language Film" awards from the Austin Film Critics Association in 2009, the Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Awards in 2009, the Florida Film Critics Circle Awards in 2009, the San Diego Film Critics Society Awards in 2009 (2nd place for Best Foreign Language Film), and the Washington DC Area Film Critics Association Awards in 2009. The film's cinematographer, Adriano Goldman, won the Cinematography award at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival, and at the 2009 Stockholm Film Festival, the film won a Best Actor award (for Edgar Flores), as well as a Best Directorial Debut and FIPRESCI Prize for Fukunaga. Fukunaga won a 2010 Premios ACE award for "Cinema – Best First Work." The film was nominated for Best Feature, Best Director and Best Cinematography from the 2010 Independent Spirit Awards, and was nominated by the 2009 British Independent Film Awards (Best Foreign Film), the 2010 Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards (Best Foreign Language Film), the 2009 Chicago Film Critics Association Awards (Most Promising Filmmaker; Best Foreign Language Film), the 2010 Image Awards (Outstanding Foreign Motion Picture), the Bronze Horse at the 2009 Stockholm Film Festival and the 2009 Sundance Film Festival Grand Jury Prize.
Jane Eyre
In 2010, Fukunaga directed a new film adaptation of Jane Eyre starring Mia Wasikowska, Michael Fassbender, Jamie Bell and Judi Dench. The film was released in 2011 and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Achievement in Costume Design for Costume Designer Michael O'Connor and a 2012 Goya Award for Best European Film. The film was nominated for a 2012 BAFTA Award (Best Costume Design), a 2012 Broadcast Film Critics Association Award (Best Costume Design), the 2012 Costume Designers Guild Awards (Excellence in Period Film), the 2012 Evening Standard British Film Awards (Best Technical Achievement), the 2011 Phoenix Film Critics Society Awards (Best Costume Design), the 2011 Satellite Awards (Best Costume Design). The 2012 Australian Film Institute awards as well as the 2011 British Independent Film Awards nominated Mia Wasikowska for a "Best Actress" award. The film's screenplay and screenwriter Moira Buffini (as well as author Charlotte Bronte) were nominated for a 2012 USC Scripter Award.
For his role in the film and other films that year (including Shame, A Dangerous Method, and X-Men: First Class, lead actor Michael Fassbender won "Best Actor" awards from the Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards, the 2011 National Board of Review Awards, the Central Ohio Film Critics Association Awards, the 2012 Evening Standard British Film Awards (also for Shame), and a 2012 Sant Jordi "Best Foreign Actor" award (also for A Dangerous Method and X-Men: First Class).
Beasts of No Nation
Fukunaga directed, wrote and filmed Beasts of No Nation, based on the novel of the same name by Uzodinma Iweala, in which Idris Elba stars as Commandant, a lead character.[17] The movie was picked up by Netflix for a reported $12 million as part of an effort to expand into original films.[18] On November 25, 2015, Fukunaga was nominated for the Independent Spirit Award for Best Director and Best Cinematography for his work on Beasts of No Nation, and the film received a nomination for Best Feature.[19]
Television
True Detective
Fukunaga directed all eight episodes of the first season of the 2014 HBO TV series True Detective, which was written and created by novelist, fiction writer and screenwriter Nic Pizzolatto.[20] The series stars Matthew McConaughey, Woody Harrelson and Michelle Monaghan. Fukunaga served as an Executive Producer on the show. The series received critical praise and was nominated for five Primetime Emmy Awards, including Outstanding Drama Series and Outstanding Directing for Fukunaga, who won. For the second season of True Detective, Fukunaga did not return as director, but continued to serve as executive producer.[8][21][22][23][24][25]
Writing and producing
Fukunaga has written most of the films he has directed. The short films that he has written the screenplays for include Kofi (2003) and Victoria para chino (2004). He wrote the screenplay to his feature film, Sin Nombre (2009), as well as his segment for the omnibus film, Chinatown Film Project (2009).
Fukunaga has produced or served as executive producer on most of the projects he has directed. He was the executive producer for his short films Kofi (2003) and Victoria para chino (2004). He was an executive producer on Andrew Okpeaha MacLean's feature film thriller, On the Ice, which won "Best Debut Film" and the "Crystal Bear" (Best Feature Film for the Generation 14+) at the 2011 Berlin Film Festival, among other awards.
Fukunaga served as an executive producer for the HBO series he directed, True Detective.
Cinematography and other work
Fukunaga served as a cinematographer on a number of short film projects, including Handmade (2013) (a documentary short directed by Rob Meyer), Sikumi (2008) (also known as Sikumi (On the Ice) about an Inuit hunter on the frozen Arctic Ocean, directed by Andrew Okpeaha MacLean), Team Queen (2007) (a short film directed by Leah Meyerhoff), the feature documentary Death of Two Sons (2006) (directed by Micah Schaffer), the short films Clear Water (2005) (directed by Natalie Mooallem), White (2005) (directed by Sebastian Mantilla), Kinnaq Nigaqtuqtuaq (2005) (directed by Andrew Okpeaha MacLean), Two Men (2005) (directed by Ian Olds) and Mating Call (2004) (directed by Patricio Serna).
He served as a camera operator on the short Glory at Sea (2008) (directed by Beasts of the Southern Wild director Benh Zeitlin), as a gaffer on the short film Just Make Believe (2008) (directed by Jadrien Steele), as an additional cinematographer on the TV documentary Small Steps: Creating the High School for Contemporary Arts (2007), assistant camera on the short film Dock (2004) (directed by Nina Martinek), additional photography for the documentary Lockdown, USA (about the "War on Drugs" campaign and directed by Rebecca Chaiklin and Michael Skolnik), additional camera for Autumn's Eyes (2006) (directed by Paola Mendoza and Gabriel Noble), a grip on the feature film Mango Kiss (2004) (directed by Sascha Rice), and as an additional film loader on the feature film Black Cadillac (2003) (directed by John Murlowski and starring Randy Quaid).
Future projects
Warner Bros. chose Fukunaga to develop, direct, and write a new adaptation of Stephen King's It, which would be split into two films and was due to start shooting in summer 2015.[26] Fukunaga was set to direct the first film and was expected to co-write the second.[26][27] Three weeks before production was slated to begin, Fukunaga left the project. New Line subsequently pushed production indefinitely.[28] A petition has been started on the website Change.org asking New Line Cinema and WB Entertainment to bring Cary back and meet his needs in order to finally put the films into production. The petition has over two thousand and five hundred signatures as of July 10, 2015.
His next feature was rumored to be a twist-filled science-fiction love story, Spaceless, from a well-known and long admired unproduced original script by I, Robot screenwriter Jeff Vintar, a favorite project of director Gore Verbinski, who would produce for Universal. Fukunaga's rewrite of Vintar's spec was too far removed from the original, and Fukunaga has since been removed as director. Verbinski is now set as the director of the original Vintar Spaceless draft.
During the summer of 2015, Fukunaga is producing, via his Parliament of Owls production company, the film Black Lung, a supernatural thriller that is set to star Amanda Seyfried and Theo James.[29]
In April 2015, Deadline.com[30] reported that Fukunaga was pairing again with Anonymous Content Productions to direct the TV series The Alienist, based upon the best selling novel by author Caleb Carr. The series is to be aired on TNT.[31]
Personal life
Fukunaga lives in New York City. Fukunaga has lived in France, Japan, and Mexico City.[5] He is fluent in French and Spanish.[5] He counts screenwriter Naomi Foner as a mentor.[32]
He has received several grants, including a USA Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship, the John H. Johnson Film Award / Princess Grace Foundation Fellowship, and a Katrin Cartlidge Foundation bursary.[citation needed]
Filmography
Year | Title | Director | Screenwriter | Cinematographer | Producer | Notes |
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2003 | Kofi | Yes | Yes | Yes | Short film | |
2003 | Black Cadillac | Additional film loader | ||||
2004 | Victoria para chino | Yes | Yes | Yes | Short film | |
2004 | The Adventures of Supernigger: Episode I – The Final Chapter | Yes | Short film | |||
2004 | Mating Call | Short film Assistant camera |
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2004 | Mango Kiss | Grip | ||||
2005 | Two Men | Yes | Short film | |||
2005 | Kinnaq Nigaqtuqtuaq | Yes | Short film | |||
2005 | White | Yes | Short film | |||
2005 | Clear Water | Yes | Short film | |||
2006 | Death of Two Sons | Yes | Documentary | |||
2006 | Autumn's Eyes | Documentary Additional camera |
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2006 | Lockdown, USA | Documentary Additional photography |
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2007 | Team Queen | Yes | Short film | |||
2007 | Small Steps: Creating the High School for Contemporary Arts | Yes | Television documentary | |||
2008 | Sikumi (On the Ice) | Yes | Short film | |||
2008 | Just Make Believe | Short film Gaffer |
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2008 | Glory at Sea | Short film Camera operator |
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2009 | Sin Nombre | Yes | Yes | Sundance Film Festival Dramatic Directing Award[33] Edinburgh International Film Festival Skillset New Directors Award Nominated—Sundance Film Festival Grand Jury Prize: Dramatic Nominated—Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Most Promising Filmmaker Nominated—Independent Spirit Award for Best Director Nominated—Golden Eye Award for Best International Feature Film |
||
2009 | Chinatown Film Project | Yes | Yes | Yes | Kiwi Lotion[34][35] | |
2011 | On the Ice | Yes | ||||
2011 | Jane Eyre | Yes | Nominated—Goya Award for Best European Film | |||
2012 | Sleepwalking in the Rift | Yes | Short film | |||
2013 | Handmade | Yes | Documentary short | |||
2014 | True Detective | Yes | Yes | Television series Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series |
||
2014 | Sikumi | Yes | Short film | |||
2015 | Beasts of No Nation | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Nominated—Independent Spirit Award for Best Feature Nominated—Independent Spirit Award for Best Director Nominated—Independent Spirit Award for Best Cinematography[19] |
References
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External links
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- Use mdy dates from October 2015
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- Articles with unsourced statements from April 2016
- 1977 births
- American cinematographers
- American film directors of Japanese descent
- American people of Swedish descent
- American male screenwriters
- American television directors
- American television producers
- American writers of Japanese descent
- Film directors from California
- Living people
- People from the San Francisco Bay Area
- Primetime Emmy Award winners
- Princess Grace Awards winners
- Sundance Film Festival award winners
- Television producers from California
- Tisch School of the Arts alumni
- University of California, Santa Cruz alumni
- Writers from Oakland, California
- English-language film directors
- American film directors of Asian descent