Nicholas Tabarrok

Last updated
Nicholas Tabarrok
Nicholas Tabarrok at a Canadian Film Centre event in Los Angeles (5515184094).jpg
NationalityCanadian
Occupationfilm producer

Nicholas Tabarrok is a film producer who started his producing career with smaller unusual films, made in his native Canada. [1] Later, larger budget films were made in America, or funded by Americans.

The Hollywood Reporter noted that Tabarrok was skilled at finding funding from government sources, citing his 2018 film Stockholm , as an example. [2] [3] Stockholm received funding help from Sweden due to casting Noomi Rapace, and other Swedish actors, and received funding help from Canada, where it was filmed. It reported that American actor Ethan Hawke was the only actor to film any scenes in Sweden—all establishing exterior shots.

Filmography

Films and television shows which Tabarrok produced or helped produce.
titleyearnotes
Garage 1997
Caprice 1997a short
Stand by Your Booth 1998a short
Motel 1998
Tribulation 2000
Lakeboat 2000
Jailbait 2000a made for tv movie
Quints 2000a made for tv movie
Left Behind: The Movie 2000
Judgment 2001
Blackout 2001a made for tv movie
Deceived 2002a music video
Left Behind II: Tribulation Force 2002
Masterpiece Monday 2003a short film
Re-Generation 2004
The Life and Hard Times of Guy Terrifico 2005
Cool Money 2005a made for TV movie
Left Behind III: World at War 2005
Run Robot Run! 2006
A Lobster Tale 2006
Weirdsville 2007
Surviving Crooked Lake 2008
Hank and Mike 2008
Jack and Jill vs. the World 2008
Coopers' Camera 2008
Down to the Dirt 2008
Love & Justice 2008a short film
Chicken Card 2008a short film
Defendor 2009
Too Late to Say Goodbye 2009a made for TV movie
A Dark Radius 2009a made for TV movie
Everything She Ever Wanted 2009a television miniseries
A Beginner's Guide to Endings 2010
Happenchance 2010a short film
Running Mates 2011
Stand by Your Booth 2012a made for TV movie
Good Satan 2012
Cold Blooded 2012
Fugget About It 2012-2013a television series
The Art of the Steal 2013
The Calling 2014
The Intruders 2015
Man Vs. 2015
Numb 2015
Look Again 2015
Stockholm 2018
The Padre 2018
The Women of Alpine Road 2019a short film
Benjamin 2019directed by Bob Saget
The Retirement Plan 2023
Irena's Vow 2023

Related Research Articles

Hollywood North is a colloquialism used to describe film production industries and/or film locations north of its namesake, Hollywood, California. The term has been applied principally to the film industry in Canada, specifically to the cities Toronto and Vancouver.

Laurence Charlotte Leboeuf is a Canadian actress.

The winners of the Vancouver Film Critics Circle Award for Best Film are listed below:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pinewood Toronto Studios</span> Filming location

Pinewood Toronto Studios is a major film and television studio complex in Toronto, Ontario, Canada and is the largest of its kind in Canada. It is the first in Toronto capable of accommodating the production of large-scale films. The studio is named for the British Pinewood Studios Group. In March 2018, it was announced that Bell Media would be buying a controlling stake in the studio.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joe Dinicol</span> Canadian actor

Joe Dinicol is a Canadian actor. He is known for his portrayal of Rory Regan / Ragman in a recurring role in the fifth season of Arrow.

<i>Defendor</i> 2009 film by Peter Stebbings

Defendor is a 2009 Canadian-American vigilante comedy-drama film written and directed by Peter Stebbings in his directorial debut. It stars Woody Harrelson as Arthur Poppington, a regular man who adopts a superhero persona named Defendor, with Elias Koteas, Michael Kelly, Sandra Oh and Kat Dennings in supporting roles.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sara Canning</span> Canadian actress

Sara Canning is a Canadian actress. She co-starred on The CW television series The Vampire Diaries as Jenna Sommers, and appeared in the 2009 feature film, Black Field. She starred as Dylan Weir in the Canadian television series, Primeval: New World, and as Dr. Melissa Conner on the Global medical drama Remedy. Canning appeared in the 2017 theatrical film War for the Planet of the Apes. She is also known for her role as Jacquelyn Scieszka in the Netflix TV series A Series of Unfortunate Events.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">North Country Cinema</span>

North Country Cinema is a Canadian media arts collective based in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.

All the Wrong Reasons is a 2013 Canadian comedy-drama film written and directed by Gia Milani. It stars Karine Vanasse, Cory Monteith, Kevin Zegers and Emily Hampshire. The film was released at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival.

<i>Adventures in Public School</i> 2017 Canadian film

Adventures in Public School is a 2017 Canadian teen comedy film directed by Kyle Rideout, who also co-wrote the screenplay with Josh Epstein. It stars Judy Greer, Daniel Doheny, Siobhan Williams, Andrew McNee, Andrew Herr, Russell Peters, and Grace Park.

<i>Rabid</i> (2019 film) 2019 Canadian film

Rabid is a 2019 Canadian body horror film directed and co-written by Jen and Sylvia Soska and starring Laura Vandervoort, Ben Hollingsworth, and Phil Brooks. It is a remake of the 1977 film of the same name directed by David Cronenberg.

<i>Antigone</i> (2019 film) 2019 film

Antigone is a 2019 Canadian drama film directed by Sophie Deraspe. An adaptation of the ancient Greek play Antigone by Sophocles, the film transposes the story to a modern-day refugee family in Montreal. The cast includes Nahéma Ricci as Antigone, with Rawad El-Zein, Hakim Brahimi, Rachida Oussaada, and Nour Belkhiria. It was filmed in Greater Montreal in 2018.

Joey Klein is a Canadian actor and film director. He is most noted for his performance in the 2016 film We're Still Together, for which he won the ACTRA Award for Best Actor from the ACTRA Awards chapter in Toronto and received a Prix Iris nomination for Best Actor at the 20th Quebec Cinema Awards.

Hamza Haq is a Canadian actor, best known for his leading role of Bashir Hamed in the medical drama television series Transplant, which earned him three consecutive Canadian Screen Awards.

<i>Black Bodies</i> (film) 2020 Canadian short film

Black Bodies is a 2020 Canadian short film, directed by Kelly Fyffe-Marshall, and produced by Tamar Bird and Sasha Leigh Henry. Inspired by a real-life incident when Fyffe-Marshall, Komi Olaf and Donisha Prendergast were travelling in California, and a woman in the neighbourhood called the police on them because she wrongly believed they were burglarizing their Airbnb rental, the film features Olaf and Prendergast performing spoken word pieces about the trauma of being victimized by anti-Black racism.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kelly Fyffe-Marshall</span> Canadian filmmaker

Kelly Fyffe-Marshall is a Canadian filmmaker best known for her 2020 two-part short film Black Bodies, which won the Changemaker Award at the 2020 Toronto International Film Festival, and won the Canadian Screen Award for Best Live Action Short Drama at the 9th Canadian Screen Awards in 2021.

The TIFF Tribute Awards are an annual award, presented by the Toronto International Film Festival to honour distinguished achievements in filmmaking. Unlike the festival's regular awards, which are presented based on audience or jury voting during the festival, the TIFF Tribute Awards are presented to people or organizations selected by the board and announced in advance of the festival. Recipients are selected from among the cast and crew of the films in that year's festival lineup.

The 26th Toronto Film Critics Association Awards, honouring the best films released in 2022, were announced on January 8, 2023.

Christian Sparkes is a Canadian film director and screenwriter from St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador. He is most noted for his film Cast No Shadow, which was a Canadian Screen Award nominee for Best Picture at the 3rd Canadian Screen Awards in 2015.

References

  1. Jennie Punter (2008-09-03). "Nicholas Tabarrok: Canuck expands Stateside". Variety magazine . Retrieved 2019-09-04.
  2. Etan Vlessing (2017-05-18). "Global Filmmakers Flock to Toronto for Movies Set in Los Angeles and Afghanistan". The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved 2019-09-04. The setting wasn't the only benefit for the production. Stockholm received financial support from Telefilm Canada, the OMDC Feature Film Fund, the Harold Greenberg Fund (for scripts and polishing), an Ontario film tax credit (with a regional bonus) and a federal film tax credit.
  3. Etan Vlessing (2018-02-12). "How 'Stockholm' Turned a Toronto Suburb Into the Swedish City". The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved 2019-09-04. The Hamilton locations were so effective that Hawke was the only actor to travel to the real Stockholm to capture exterior shots. "Stockholm would not have been possible without the support of Telefilm, provincial and federal tax credits and the OMDC," Tabarrok says. "It's nearly impossible to finance a film this size without the support of government incentives."