Adam Green (filmmaker)

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Adam Green
AdamGreen0033.JPG
Green at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival
Born1975 (age 4849)
Holliston, Massachusetts, United States
Alma mater Hofstra University
Occupation(s)Film director, screenwriter, actor, musician
Years active1996–present
Notable work
Spouse(s)
(m. 2010;div. 2014)

Natasha Marshall (m. 2022)
Website ariescope.com

Adam Green (born March 31, 1975) [1] is an American actor, filmmaker and musician, best known for his work in horror and comedy films, including the Hatchet franchise, 2010's Frozen , and the television series Holliston . [2] He was also the lead singer for the hard rock and metal band Haddonfield .

Contents

Early life

Green was born and raised in Holliston, Massachusetts. After finishing high school in 1993, he left for New York to study film and television production at Hofstra University, where he graduated in 1997 with a Bachelor of Science.

After finishing studies, Green worked in Boston making local commercials for Time Warner Cable, where he met his future collaborator Will Barratt. In 1998, the duo founded production company ArieScope Pictures and the following year made their first feature-length film: the semi-biographic comedy Coffee & Donuts. Green starred in the lead role, while other parts were played by Steven C. DeWitt Jr., Katie Bove and Jeff Davison. This amateur production has not been widely released. [2]

Career

Spiral (2007) is Joel David Moore's and JD Boreing's thriller, which Green co-directed. [3] The story follows an isolated telemarketer (Moore), who befriends a new co-worker and then struggles with troubling past feelings, threatening his personal dignity. Critics hailed Spiral as "nothing short of brilliant" and "the closest thing you'll get to Hitchcock in this day and age". The film won Gold Vision Award at the 2008 Santa Barbara Film Festival. [4]

Green and Joe Lynch's free weekly filmmaker interview and film commentary podcast launched on GeekNation in May 2013. The name references creators' sitcom Holliston, along with other inside jokes in the content. The talk show was recommended by Entertainment Weekly under the headline "20 podcasts you need to hear in 2015" (January 9, 2015; print issue #1345) [5] and used as curriculum in film schools such as UCLA and Emerson.[ verification needed ]

Hatchet franchise

Hatchet (2006) is the first feature of Green's successful franchise. [6] [7] The horror comedy tributes old-school American slashers and follows a group of tourists, who take a swamp boat ride and wind up pursued by the ghost of local legend Victor Crowley. Theatrically released on September 7, 2007, the film was relatively well received by some critics and earned a worldwide horror cult following, resulting in three sequels for 2010, 2013, and 2017. [8] [6] [7]

Hatchet II (2010) is franchise's sequel, starring Kane Hodder and Danielle Harris. [9] Green eagerly promoted his film by pre-advertising (Anchor Bay, MySpace), [10] in press (Creation Entertainment, [11] Comic-Con, [12] Frozen events [13] ) and with credits (Adam Green's Hatchet II). Filmed in the beginning of the year, sequel premiered at the London FrightFest Film Festival 2010. The theatrical release made headlines when distributor Dark Sky agreed with AMC Theatres to bypass MPAA ratings' board and on October 1, 2010 released the unrated Hatchet II, which got revoked within hours. The officially reported reason by AMC was poor performance, but Green has alluded to controversy with MPAA. [14] [15] Metacritic rated the film 49/100 based on 11 reviews. [16] Rotten Tomatoes reports a 36% approval rating and an average score of 4.2/10 based on 33 reviews; the site's consensus reads: "Funnier and more gleefully gory than most slasher sequels, Hatchet II aims for so-bad-it's-good territory, but can't quite hack it." [17]

Hatchet III (2013) is the third feature of Green's franchise, directed by BJ McDonnell and starring Kane Hodder, Danielle Harris, Derek Mears. Production began in April 2012, and the film was released in United States theaters and VOD on June 14, 2013. [18] In press announcements, Green passionately assured fans, disappointed about the substitute director, that he personally oversaw all development. Though Green has clearly stated that Hatchet III is meant to be the end of the story, and that he always had set out to make a trilogy, he has also speculated that this is only the ending to his story of Marybeth and Victor Crowley and that fans could potentially see more Hatchet films in the future with a different storyline, different characters, and (possibly) different storytellers behind the camera. [18] [7] Rotten Tomatoes gave the film a 55% approval rating based on 22 reviews, [19] and Metacritic rated it 25/100 based on eight reviews. [20] As part of Green's three-day fundraiser to benefit victims of the Boston Marathon bombing, all three films were shown in Hatchet Marathon on May 30, 2013, and filmmaker made a donation to One Fund Boston. [21]

Victor Crowley (2017) is the fourth feature in Green's Hatchet franchise. Written and directed by Green, the film was produced in secret over 2015 and 2016, with Green unveiling the finished film as a complete surprise during a "10th Anniversary Event" for Hatchet at the Arclight Hollywood where it received two standing ovations on August 22, 2017. The film immediately premiered in London four days later (August 26, 2017) as part of UK FrightFest, where it received yet another standing ovation, marking only the second time a film has ever received a standing ovation at FrightFest in the festival's 18-year history. Green took the film on a 52-city theatrical world tour throughout the fall of 2017 in advance of its February 6, 2018 release on home video. The film stars Kane Hodder, Parry Shen, Laura Ortiz, Brian Quinn, Dave Sheridan, Felissa Rose, and Tiffany Shepis.

Frozen

Frozen (2010) is Green's low-budget thriller, starring Kevin Zegers, Emma Bell and Shawn Ashmore. The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and was released in North American theaters on February 5, 2010. [22] [13] Metacritic rated it 45/100 based on 16 reviews. [23] Rotten Tomatoes reported a 62% approval rating and an average score of 5.9/10; the site's critical consensus reads: "Writer/director Adam Green has the beginnings of an inventive, frightening yarn in Frozen, but neither the script nor the cast are quite strong enough to truly do it justice." [24] On the other hand, some critics were pleased with the results. Jeannette Catsoulis of The New York Times writes: "A minimalist setup delivers maximum fright in [this] nifty little chiller that balances its cold terrain with an unexpectedly warm heart." [25] And Rex Reed presents more impressions in his sensationalist article in The New York Observer : "I was left so paralyzed with terror by this movie that I chewed a whole pencil in half watching it." [26]

Chillerama: "Anne Frankenstein"

Green wrote and directed segment "The Diary of Anne Frankenstein" as part of the 2011 comedy/horror anthology Chillerama , which consists of four short films by four different filmmakers. The parody "Anne Frankenstein" is shot in black and white and made entirely in German to look and feel like a lost 1940's foreign film. While Green cast authentic German speaking actors for all roles, the lead role of Adolf Hitler is portrayed by Joel David Moore, who does not know how to speak German and purposely fakes his way through the film by using a combination of gibberish and random words thrown to him by Green, such as "Boba Fett", "OshKosh B'Gosh" and "Goldie Hawn". Kane Hodder portrays the film's hero Meshugannah – a Hassidic Jewish take on the classic Frankenstein monster, who ultimately turns against his master and kills him.

Holliston

Based on Green's life and largely adapted from his romantic comedy Coffee & Donuts, the sitcom Holliston follows the lives of Adam (played by Green) and Joe (played by a fellow genre director and real-life best friend, Joe Lynch), two aspiring horror filmmakers living in the small town of Holliston, Massachusetts. Together they work at a local cable advertising station and struggle with fledgling careers, making ends meet and dealing with the opposite sex. The ensemble cast includes Laura Ortiz (who plays Laura, Joe's girlfriend), Corri English (who plays Corri, Adam's ex-girlfriend and the greatest heartbreak of his life), Dee Snider (who plays Lance Rockett, Adam and Joe's cross-dressing boss, still stuck in the 80's, who is the lead singer for a Van Halen cover band), and GWAR frontman Dave Brockie (who played Oderus, Adam's imaginary alien friend who lives in his closet).[ citation needed ]

Holliston was the first original series for FEARnet. Green wrote and directed the six episodes comprising season one of this show, mixing comedy, horror, romance, and described by the network as "Big Bang Theory meets Evil Dead 2".[ citation needed ] The first season was filmed in September–October 2011 and produced by ArieScope Pictures. Series was advertised in the January 13, 2012 issue of Entertainment Weekly and launched on the FEARnet network on April 3, 2012, with a second season formally announced after two episodes. Guest stars include Seth Green, John Landis, Kane Hodder, Brian Posehn, Ray Wise, Deanna Pappas, Derek Mears, Colton Dunn, Danielle Harris, Nick Ballard, Parry Shen, Magda Apanowicz, and Tony Todd.[ citation needed ] In interviews Green has described Holliston as his "most passionate of passion projects" and explained that the show took him over 13 years to bring to fruition.[ citation needed ]

After the 2014 death of cast member Dave Brockie and the dissolving of FEARnet just a few weeks later, Holliston went on an indefinite hiatus. In July 2015, Entertainment Weekly announced that Holliston would return with a third season.[ citation needed ]

Digging Up the Marrow

Green's undercover project, Digging Up the Marrow , described as a reality based dark fantasy about monsters, was made in collaboration between Green and popular urban artist Alex Pardee. Production began in 2010 and was fully completed in 2014. In the documentary-style movie Green plays himself; Will Barratt, loyal Green collaborator since 1997, is cameraman; [27] [28] and actor Ray Wise portrays Detective William Dekker, an eccentric and mysterious man who contacts Green with the claim that monsters not only exist, but that he knows where to find them. [29]

After an unofficial preview of a work-in-progress cut in 2013 at Harry Knowles's annual Butt-Numb-A-Thon, the final version of Digging Up The Marrow premiered at FrightFest in London on August 23, 2014. The film was released in US cinemas and VOD on February 20, 2015, and on DVD and Blu-ray March 24, 2015. [30] Rotten Tomatoes reports that 53% of 15 surveyed critics gave the film a positive review; the average rating is 5.7/10. [31] Metacritic rated it 45/100 based on eight reviews. [32]

Haddonfield

In 1998, Green formed the hard rock and metal band Haddonfield, which he fronted as the lead singer. A large regional draw in the Boston area, the band was put on the back burner for several years when Green's film career took off and relocated him to Los Angeles in the 2000s. On July 24, 2017, it was announced that Green had made Haddonfield fully active once again, and that the band had signed with Megadeth bassist David Ellefson's EMP Label Group, who would be putting out the band's debut record Ghosts of Salem in conjunction with Green's own imprint label ArieScope Records. Ghosts of Salem was released digitally worldwide on September 15, 2017, with the physical CD version and a limited edition vinyl version arriving in stores just one month later on October 13, 2017. Haddonfield celebrated the album release with a performance at the Worcester Palladium in Worcester, Massachusetts, on October 14, 2017, on a bill that also featured Ministry, Superjoint Ritual, DevilDriver, and Motionless in White.

On July 11, 2019, Haddonfield's bass player Chris Permatteo died from natural causes. When Green addressed Permatteo's death on The Movie Crypt podcast the following Monday, he stated that Haddonfield would not continue on, and that he would never perform their songs on stage again.

Filmography

Feature films

YearTitleCredited asNotes
DirectorWriterProducerActor
2000Coffee & DonutsYesYesYesYes
2006 Hatchet YesYesYesYes
2007 Spiral Yes
2008 Gingerdead Man 2: Passion of the Crust Yes
2009 Grace YesYes
2010 Frozen YesYesYes
Hatchet II YesYesYesYes
2011 Chillerama YesYesYesYes
2013 Hatchet III YesYesYes
2014 Digging Up the Marrow YesYesYesYesalso editor
2015 Tales of Halloween Yes
2017 Victor Crowley YesYesYesYes
2018For the Love of HalloweenYesYesYesYesalso editor

Television series

Short films

Acting roles

Other appearances

Discography

Bibliography

YearTitle
2008The Book of Lists: Horror – Contributing writer
2011Hack/Slash: Hatchet/Slash – Characters created by
2011Unmasked – Foreword by
2016Holliston: Friendship Is Tragic – Created by
2017Hatchet: Issue 0 – Created by
2017Hatchet: Issue 1 – Created by
2018Hatchet: Issue 2 – Created by
2018Hatchet: Issue 3 – Created by
2018Holliston: Carnival Of Carnage – Created by
2018I, Survivor – Written by
2019Hatchet – Vengeance: Issue 1 – Created by
2019Hatchet – Vengeance: Issue 2 – Created by
2019Hatchet – Victor Crowley's Halloween Tales – Created by
2020Hatchet – Victor Crowley's Halloween Tales 2 – Created and written by
2021Hatchet – Vengeance: Issue 3 – Created by
2021Hatchet – Unstoppable Horror – Created by
2021Hatchet – Victor Crowley's Halloween Tales 3 – Created by
2021Holliston: Holliston Goes to Hell – Created by
2022Hatchet - Victor Crowley's Halloween Tales 4 – Created by
2023Hatchet - Victor Crowley's Halloween Tales 5 – Created by
2024Hatchet - Victor Crowley's Halloween Tales 6 – Created by
2024Hatchet - Midnight Murders: Issue 1 – Created by

Awards and nominations

YearAwardCategoryTitle of workResult
2000The Smoky Mountain/Nantahala Film FestivalBest Feature FilmCoffee & DonutsWon
2000The Smoky Mountain/Nantahala Film FestivalBest ActorCoffee & DonutsNominated
2006 Austin Fantastic Fest Audience AwardHatchetWon
2007Fright Meter AwardsBest Horror MovieHatchetNominated
2007 Fantasia Film Festival Best European/North – South American FilmHatchetWon
2007 Austin Fantastic Fest Next Wave AwardSpiralWon
2007 Santa Barbara International Film Festival Kodak Gold Vision AwardSpiralWon
2009 Gerardmer Film Festival Best Feature FilmGraceWon
2009 Sitges – Catalan International Film Festival Best FilmGraceNominated
2009 Toronto After Dark Film Festival Vision AwardGraceWon
2009Neuchatel International Fantasy Film FestivalBest Feature FilmGraceNominated
2009 The Official Star Wars Fan Film Awards Best Action [34] SaberWon
2009 The Official Star Wars Fan Film Awards Audience Choice [34] SaberWon
2010 Saturn Awards Best Horror FilmFrozenNominated
2010Fright Meter AwardsBest DirectorFrozenWon
2010Fright Meter AwardsBest ScreenplayFrozenNominated
2010Fright Meter AwardsBest DirectorHatchet IINominated
2010Fright Meter AwardsBest Horror MovieHatchet IINominated
2011 Scream Awards Best Independent MovieHatchet IINominated
2011Rondo Hatton Classic Horror AwardsBest Independent FilmChilleramaWon
2014BloodGuts UK Horror AwardsBest DirectorDigging Up The MarrowWon
2014BloodGuts UK Horror AwardsBest ActorDigging Up The MarrowWon
2014BloodGuts UK Horror AwardsBest ScreenplayDigging Up The MarrowNominated
2014BloodGuts UK Horror AwardsBest EditorDigging Up The MarrowNominated
2017Toronto After Dark Film Festival AwardsBest KillVictor CrowleyWon
2017Toronto After Dark Film Festival AwardsBest GoreVictor CrowleyWon
2017Toronto After Dark Film Festival AwardsBest Practical EffectsVictor CrowleyWon
2017Toronto After Dark Film Festival AwardsBest Monster/CreatureVictor CrowleyWon

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