Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Frank Darabont

 
Writer: Frank Darabont
  • Born: Jan 28, 1959
  • Occupation: Writer, Director
  • Active: '80s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Thriller
  • Career Highlights: The Shawshank Redemption, The Blob, The Green Mile
  • First Major Screen Credit: A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987)

Biography

A director who has all but put his trademark on the humane prison drama, director, screenwriter, and producer Frank Darabont made his triumphant feature film directorial debut with The Shawshank Redemption (1994). Starring Tim Robbins and Morgan Freeman as two inmates imprisoned for life, the film earned wide acclaim and a number of honors, including Best (Adapted) Screenplay Oscar and Golden Globe nominations for Darabont.

Darabont, who spent his early years in Hollywood as a set decorator and production assistant, got his first break as a production aide on the 1981 horror film Hell Night. His work on the film introduced him to filmmaker Chuck Russell, with whom he would write the screenplays for A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987), the 1988 update of The Blob, and The Fly 2, the 1989 sequel to David Cronenberg's 1986 classic.

Darabont made his directorial debut with the 1990 made-for-cable Buried Alive, a thriller starring Tim Matheson and Jennifer Jason Leigh. Following the success of The Shawshank Redemption in 1994, Darabont took a five-year hiatus from directing, making a triumphant return with the 1999 prison drama The Green Mile. Starring Tom Hanks as a kind prison guard and Michael Clarke Duncan in an Oscar-nominated performance as a saintly death row inmate, the film garnered a slew of awards in addition to Duncan's nomination; they included a Directors Guild of America Best Director Award nomination, as well as three more Oscar nominations, including Best Picture and a second Best Adapted Screenplay nomination for Darabont. ~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Frank Darabont
Top
Frank Darabont
Born January 28, 1959 (1959-01-28) (age 50)
Montbeliard, France
Other name(s) Frank A. Darabont
Occupation Film director
Screenwriter
Producer
Years active 1981–present

Frank Darabont (born January 28, 1959) is a Hungarian-American film director, screenwriter and producer. He has directed the films The Shawshank Redemption[1], The Green Mile[2], and The Mist.

Contents

Biography

Early life

Darabont was born in a refugee camp in 1959 in Montbeliard, France. His parents fled Hungary after the 1956 Hungarian Revolution. When he was still an infant, his family moved to the United States.

Career

By the age of 20, Darabont became involved in filmmaking. One of his first films was a short adaptation of Stephen King's The Woman in the Room, which made the semi-finalist list for Academy Award consideration in 1983, and was shown in its entirety in the 1986 syndicated television special, Stephen King's World of Horror.[citation needed] The short, a Dollar Baby, led to a close association with King, who granted him the "handshake deal" rights to another one of his shorter works, Rita Hayworth and Shawshank Redemption from the collection Different Seasons.

Prior to his directing career, Darabont was a successful screenwriter with work on genre films that included: A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors, The Blob, The Fly II and an unproduced sequel to Commando.[3] Darabont made his feature length directorial debut with Buried Alive, a TV movie with a $2,000,000 budget that aired on the USA Network in 1990. Darabont followed with an extended run as writer for George Lucas's short-lived television series The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles. He became famous, however, after making good on the deal with Stephen King by writing and directing 1994 The Shawshank Redemption for which he was nominated for a Best Adapted Screenplay at the 1995 Academy Awards. The film was also nominated for six other Academy Awards including Best Picture.

After a five-year hiatus, Darabont returned to the screen with the well-received The Green Mile, a film he directed, scripted and produced. Like The Shawshank Redemption, this film is also based on a Stephen King work. The film was nominated for the Oscar for Best Picture and Darabont was nominated for his second Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay. He followed this with The Majestic two years later in 2001 to considerably less fanfare. Following lukewarm reviews from critics, the film failed at the box-office, recouping only half of its $72 million budget internationally.

Darabont is known to have doctored the scripts of the Steven Spielberg films Saving Private Ryan and Minority Report. In 2002, he penned an early draft of Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, and while Spielberg reportedly loved it, George Lucas rejected it.

In 2005, Cemetery Dance Publications published Darabont's novella Walpuski's Typewriter in a limited edition. The story, originally written in his early twenties, first appeared in Jessie Horsting's magazine Midnight Graffiti. His 2007 film The Mist marked his fourth adaptation of a Stephen King work, and the film received worldwide praise from many audiences, and gained a decent revenue at the box office.

Recently, director Guillermo del Toro commented that he had read a draft of Frankenstein written by Darabont that he would "kill to direct." However, in recent months Del Toro has been attached to many other projects and it looks as if his involvement in the project is unlikely. No official word has been given on the film's development. Darabont has also explained that he will be adapting King's The Long Walk into a film. No plans have been made for it yet, but Darabont explained that he would "get there eventually."[4]

Darabont appeared in an October 26, 2008, episode of Entourage called First Class Jerk, where he propositions Vincent Chase to star in a TV show he is executive producing. He appeared in a September 12, 2009, episode where he is now the director of the film about Enzo Ferrari, who Vince is portraying.

Darabont is currently at work on a new AMC series based on Robert Kirkman's The Walking Dead.[5]

Filmography

Feature films
Year Film Other notes
1983 The Woman in the Room Short Film
1987 A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors
1988 The Blob
1989 The Fly II
1994 The Shawshank Redemption Festival, Studio Crystal Heart Award
Hochi Film Award for Best Foreign Language Film
Humanitas Prize for Best Film
Kinema Junpo Reader's Choice Award for Best Foreign Language Film
USC Scripter Award (shared with Stephen King)
Nominated - Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay
Nominated - Golden Globe for Best Adapted Screenplay
Nominated - Director's Guild of America Best Director
Nominated - Writer's Guild of America Best Adapted Screenplay
Nominated - Saturn Award for Best Writing
Heartland Film
Mary Shelley's Frankenstein Nominated - Saturn Award for Best Writing (shared with Steph Lady)
1999 The Green Mile Nominated - Academy Award for Best Picture
Nominated - Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay
Nominated - Saturn Award for Best Director
Nominated - Bram Stoker Award for Best Screenplay
Nominated - Director's Guild of America Award for Best Director
Nominated - OFCS Award for Best Adapted Screenplay
Nominated - Nebula Award for Best Script
Nominated - USC Scripter Award (shared with Stephen King)
2001 The Majestic
2007 The Mist Won Saturn Award (Best DVD Special Edition Release 2 disc Special Edition.)
Won Saturn Award (Best Supporting Actress Marcia Gay Harden)
Nominated - Saturn Award for Best Director
Nominated - Saturn Award for Best Horror Film
Nominated - Empire Award Best Horror
Nominated - Young Artist Award (Best Performance in a Feature Film - Young Actor Age Ten or Younger Nathan Gamble)
2010 Fahrenheit 451 Upcoming Film
TBA The Long Walk Upcoming Film

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Writer. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Frank Darabont" Read more