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James Mangold

 
Director: James Mangold
  • Occupation: Director, Writer
  • Active: '90s-2000s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Romance
  • Career Highlights: Cop Land, Heavy, Girl, Interrupted
  • First Major Screen Credit: Oliver and Company (1988)

Biography

A director known for making sophisticated dramas that chronicle people's emotional and moral struggles in the face of an often hostile outside world, James Mangold first earned acclaim for Heavy, his 1995 film debut. The poignant and often wordless account of an overweight pizza chef's (Pruitt Taylor Vince) unrequited longing for a young waitress (Liv Tyler), the film was a success among critics and art house audiences, winning the Grand Jury Prize for Best Director at the 1995 Sundance Festival.

Raised in New York's Hudson Valley (where he would later film Heavy), Mangold, the son of minimalist painter Robert Mangold, attended the California Institute of the Arts, where he studied film and acting. He broke into the film business at the tender age of 21 as the recipient of a prestigious writer/director deal with Disney. However, he was eventually dropped by the studio for, in his words, refusing to play Hollywood's "very elaborate chess game." Mangold subsequently supported himself through a series of odd jobs and endured a phase of unemployment. He eventually decided to go to Columbia University's film school, where he began working on Heavy under the guidance of director Milos Forman. Inspired in part by the upstate New York town where he was raised and in part by a very overweight friend he once had, Mangold set out, in his words, "to make a film about a large man who's invisible." With a cast that, in addition to Vince and relative newcomer Tyler, included Debbie Harry and Shelly Winters, Heavy evolved into a beautifully-stylized film full of richly somber moments and almost poetic silences.

Following the critical success of Heavy, Mangold embarked on a project that appeared to be an ostensible departure from his first. Cop Land (1997), which Mangold wrote while making Heavy, was a cop drama set in a New Jersey town populated largely by commuting members of the NYPD. Although much of the film focused on police corruption, its central character, the town's half-deaf sheriff (Sylvester Stallone, who gained 38 pounds for the role), was similar to Heavy's protagonist in his inability to fit in with his peers and his desire to get what he cannot have, in this case, work in the city. Starring Stallone, Harvey Keitel, Robert De Niro, Ray Liotta, and Janeane Garofalo (all of whom worked for scale pay instead of their usual salaries), Cop Land was accepted into the main competition of the Cannes Film Festival and premiered in the U.S. to strong reviews.

Continuing his tradition of documenting the inner struggles of conflicted individuals, Mangold next set about adapting Susanna Kaysen's Girl, Interrupted for the screen. Kaysen's powerful memoir of the 18 months she spent in an exclusive mental hospital during the late 1960s, its fragmented, episodic narrative proved a challenge to adapt, and the finished product led many critics to comment that it was a challenge to which Mangold had failed to rise. However, the film proved to be a showcase for some of the most talented actresses of the day, including Winona Ryder, Brittany Murphy, and Angelina Jolie, who won a Best Supporting Actress Golden Globe, Oscar, and Screen Actors Guild Award for her portrayal of Lisa, the charming sociopath who befriends Ryder's protagonist. Mangold next set to work on the time-traveling romantic comedy Kate & Leopold, starring Meg Ryan and Hugh Jackman. The film received a luke-warm response, not to mention an embarrassing last-minute re-edit to correct a plot point that would make Meg Ryan's character her own ex-boyfriend's great great great grandmother. Mangold would quickly put these tousles with mediocrity behind him, however, with 2005's acclaimed biopic Walk the Line.

Joaquin Phoenix and Reese Witherspoon starred in this tremendously successful film as legendary country music couple Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash. A long project in the making, Cash reportedly chose Phoenix for the part before his death in 2003. Both leads performed their own vocals for the movie, as well as learning the guitar and autoharp, respectively, and took home Golden Globes for their performances. The film itself was also honored with the award for Best Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy at the event, a tremendous success for Mangold.

~ Rebecca Flint Marx, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: James Mangold
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James Mangold

Mangold at Hollywood Life Magazine’s 7th Annual Breakthrough Awards, December 9, 2007
Born James Allen Mangold
December 16, 1963 (1963-12-16) (age 45)
New York City, New York
Occupation film director, screenwriter
Years active 1995 - present
Spouse(s) Cathy Konrad (m.1998)

James Allen Mangold (born 16 December 1963) is an American film director and screenwriter. He is perhaps best known for Walk the Line which he co-wrote and directed.

Life and career

Mangold was born in New York City, New York, the son of artists Robert Mangold and Sylvia Plimack Mangold. After graduating from Washingtonville High School, Mangold was accepted into the California Institute of the Arts film/video program. While there, he mentored under Alexander Mackendrick. During his third year, Mackendrick suggested Mangold study at CalArts School of Theater as an actor alongside with his regular film studies. One of his classmates was Don Cheadle.

Based on the response to his short films, in 1985 Mangold got a fast start as a graduate out of CalArts, securing a writer/director deal (at age 21) at Disney. Mangold grew disillusioned at the studio. He wrote a television movie and the animated feature "Oliver and Company". A few years later, Mangold decided to re-establish himself in New York and applied to Columbia University's film school, where he graduated with an MFA in film. While there, he studied under Miloš Forman and developed both Heavy and Cop Land.

Working consistently as a feature writer and director since 1995, when his first feature, the independent film Heavy, won the best directing prize at the Sundance Film Festival.

Mangold subsequently wrote and directed Cop Land starring Sylvester Stallone, Robert De Niro, Harvey Keitel and Ray Liotta; Girl, Interrupted, which won the Best Supporting Actress Oscar in 1999 for Angelina Jolie; Kate and Leopold, starring Meg Ryan and Hugh Jackman for which Jackman was nominated for a Golden Globe as best actor in a musical or comedy in 2001, and the 2003 thriller Identity which starred John Cusack.

In 2005 he co-wrote and directed Walk the Line, a film about the young life of singer-songwriter Johnny Cash and his relationship with June Carter Cash. It stars Joaquin Phoenix and Reese Witherspoon and was released on November 18, 2005. It was nominated for five Oscars and Witherspoon won Best Actress for her performance as June Carter Cash. His most recent film, 3:10 to Yuma, starring Russell Crowe and Christian Bale, was released September 8, 2007, and has received wide citical acclaim.

During the filming and production of Cop Land, Mangold met his partner and wife, producer, Cathy Konrad.

Mangold also appeared as an actor in The Sweetest Thing as a doctor and love interest to Christina Applegate as well as in his own Kate and Leopold playing a movie director.

Filmography (director)

Year Title No. of Oscar nominations No. of Oscar wins
1995 Heavy
1997 Cop Land
1999 Girl, Interrupted 1 1
2001 Kate & Leopold 1
2003 Identity
2005 Walk the Line 5 1
2007 3:10 to Yuma 2
2010 Knight & Day [formerly Wichita]

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