Bryan Singer
Bryan Singer (born
September 17 1965) is an
American film director. Singer won critical acclaim for his work on
The Usual Suspects, and is especially popular among fans of the
sci-fi and
comic book genres, for his work on the first two
X-Men films and
Superman Returns.
Singer was born in
New York City. He was adopted by Norbert and Grace Singer and grew up in a
Jewish household in
New Jersey. He attended
West Windsor-Plainsboro High School South (formerly just West Windsor-Plainsboro High School), then studied filmmaking at
New York's
School of Visual Arts and later
USC School of Cinema-Television in
Los Angeles. Actors
Lori and
Marc Singer are his cousins. He is Jewish and
gay, and has said that his life experiences of growing up as a
minority influenced his movies
.
His production company,
Bad Hat Harry Productions, produces
House and works in television, film, and video game media. It is named after a line from
Jaws, one of his favorite films. The line, "That's some bad hat, Harry", is heard over the company's end credit animation.
Lion's Den
After graduating, Singer directed a short film called
Lion's Den. With
Lion's Den he involved a number of friends, including actor
Ethan Hawke whom he knew from his childhood in New Jersey
and editor
John Ottman who he had met while working on a friend's short film.
Public Access
After a screening of
Lion's Den, Singer was approached by someone who knew of a Japanese company that funded low-budget films. Together with
Christopher McQuarrie, a friend from high school, Singer wrote the screenplay for
Public Access, a movie about a supposedly idyllic small town. Ottman again served as editor but this time also composed the score for the film. At the 1993
Sundance Film Festival the film was named as co-winner of the
Grand Jury Prize.
The Usual Suspects
While attending the 1993 Sundance Film Festival, Singer and McQuarrie began discussing an idea that McQuarrie had for a story where "five criminals meet in a police line-up". The film,
The Usual Suspects, won a number of awards including the 1995
BAFTA Award for Best Film and
Saturn Award for Best Action/Adventure/Thriller Film. Writer McQuarrie won the
Academy Award for Writing Original Screenplay and the
BAFTA Award for Best Screenplay, composer/editor Ottman won the
BAFTA Award for Best Editing and the
Saturn Award for Best Music and actor
Kevin Spacey won the
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.
Apt Pupil
In 1998, Singer directed
Apt Pupil, from a screenplay written by
Brandon Boyce, another of his friends. The story, adapted from a
Stephen King novella of the same name (collected in the book
Different Seasons), tells of a young boy who develops a morbid fascination with a Nazi war criminal. An experience from Singer's childhood, where he and his friends briefly formed a "Nazi Club", is often cited as attracting him to this project (Singer said this club was born not out of anti-Semitism but rather due to the kids' fascination with
World War II).
X-Men
Singer was initially approached by
20th Century Fox to direct
X-Men after directing
The Usual Suspects, but not being a fan of comics and being unaware of the characters, Singer turned them down. However his friend,
Tom DeSanto, a big fan of the comics and partner in his production company Bad Hat Harry Productions, eventually persuaded Singer to reconsider and, after reading the comics and becoming familiar with the characters, Singer signed on to direct. Rejecting all the scripts and storylines that were developed over a decade of failed production attempts, Singer developed the story for the film with DeSanto in a week and then worked on the script with a friend who had actually started out as Singer's driver,
David Hayter. Singer won the 2000
Saturn Award for Best Direction for
X-Men.
Confessions of a Dangerous Mind
In early 2001, Singer was planning to direct
Confessions of a Dangerous Mind with
Johnny Depp in the lead role, from
Charlie Kaufman's script based on the
Chuck Barris book of the same name. However financial troubles delayed production and Singer had to move on. The film was later directed by
George Clooney for
Miramax Films with
Sam Rockwell in the lead role. Singer has said that he was "very impressed" by Clooney's direction, and the film itself.
Battlestar Galactica
In late
2001, Singer was planning to help DeSanto produce a new
Battlestar Galactica television series for
Studio USA (now
NBC Universal Television Studio) and the
FOX network. Singer was scheduled to direct the mini-series which would have served as a
backdoor pilot for a potential series. Speaking to
Variety in
February 2001, Singer said he was "confident that the
Galactica brand is a sleeping giant. It was a show I watched during its initial run, from the pilot to the final episode. The essence and the brand name is quite potent in a climate where there's a great deficit of sci-fi programming." Despite his enthusiasm, production delays caused by the
September 11, 2001 attacks meant Singer had to drop out due to his commitment to direct
X-Men 2. FOX then lost interest in
Galactica and Studio USA took the project to the
Sci Fi Channel and a different production team. This resulted in the new
Battlestar Galactica 2003 mini-series and
2004 television series.
X2
In June 2002 filming began on
X2 in
Canada with Singer again directing, this time from a screenplay written by
David Hayter,
Dan Harris and
Michael Dougherty. In 2004,
X2 was nominated for the
Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form, but lost to
Peter Jackson's
The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King.
Star Trek: Nemesis
|
Singer appearing in a cameo role in Star Trek: Nemesis |
In 2002 having learned that Singer was a life long
Star Trek fan,
Patrick Stewart arranged for Singer to visit the set of
Star Trek: Nemesis and appear in the finished film as a
Starfleet officer on the bridge of the
Enterprise.
House M.D.
On
November 16 2004 a new medical drama debuted on FOX called
House, M.D. (shortened to
House), with Singer attached as an executive producer. He also directed the pilot and the third episode, then appeared in a brief cameo as himself in the twelfth episode.
King Kong
As an elaborate joke, during the final days of principal photography, Singer was called into New Zealand by director
Peter Jackson to "direct" some of the last few shots of his remake of
King Kong, the reason being that Jackson was exhausted from weeks of work and needed to sleep, but also needed to assure the Universal executives that progress was in fact being made. Part of these proceedings were shown on
Peter Jackson's King Kong Production Diaries, as well as on the Bluetights.net production diaries.
Superman Returns
Mid 2004, Singer was in negotiations to direct
X-Men 3 for FOX, but he was then offered the chance to direct the new
Superman film. On July 19 2004,
Variety reported that Singer had signed on to direct
Superman Returns for
Warner Bros. In retaliation FOX terminated their production deal with Bad Hat Harry Productions, Singer's production company.
Superman Returns was filmed in
Australia in 2005, and was released on June 28, 2006. Singer claims that he had always admired and identified with the Superman character, though he had not read the comics but based more on his love of the 1978 film made by
Richard Donner, citing that he and Superman are both orphans and admired the goodness the character projects.
Future plans
Singer's next project after
Superman Returns was planned to be a new adaptation of the 1967 novel
Logan's Run. Frequent Singer collaboraters Michael Dougherty, Dan Harris, and Christopher McQuarrie have all worked on the script. Singer worked on the pre-visualization stages of
Logan's Run while also developing
Superman Returns. However,
as of July 2006, Singer is unsure whether he will still direct the
Logan's Run remake.
At the premiere of
The Triangle on
December 1 2005, Singer gave an interview in which he expressed an interest in directing a
Star Trek film, sparking rumors that this would be his next project after
Logan's Run. The
Star Trek speculation intensified when
Star Trek and
X-Men star
Patrick Stewart stated that Paramount had contacted him about doing another Trek movie. However,
J.J. Abrams (who, coincidentally, wrote a script for the Superman film immediately prior to Singer being hired) was confirmed by
Paramount as the producer and likely director of the
11th Star Trek movie, which is said to focus on the early days of
Captain Kirk's crew. Singer is also supposedly set to direct two independent films:
The Mayor of Castro Street, a biography of San Francisco gay rights activist
Harvey Milk, and
You Want Me to Kill Him?.
At
Comic-Con International on July 21, 2006, Singer told fans that he has had discussions with Warner Bros. Pictures about directing a sequel to
Superman Returns for release in the summer of 2009. He expressed his desire to include more action sequences, introduce an alien supervillain, and "go all
Wrath of Khan on it" - a reference to
Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.
*
John Ottman: Projects*
Director Bio: Bryan Singer*
Blue Tights Network: Superman Returns*
Short The Movie Reporter video interview with Singer (2005)