Gore Verbinski | |
Birth Name: | Gregor Justin Verbinski |
Birth Date: | 16 March 1964 |
Birth Place: | Oak Ridge, Tennessee, U.S. |
Alma Mater: | UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television |
Years Active: | 1989–present |
Notable Works: | Mouse Hunt The Ring Pirates of the Caribbean Rango |
Awards: | Academy Award for Best Animated Feature Rango (2011) BAFTA Award for Best Animated Film Rango (2011) |
Spouse: | Clayton Verbinski |
Children: | 2 |
Gregor Justin "Gore" Verbinski (born March 16, 1964) is an American film director, screenwriter, and producer. He is best known for directing Mouse Hunt, The Ring, the first three Pirates of the Caribbean films, and Rango. For his work on Rango, Verbinski won both the Academy Award and BAFTA Award for Best Animated Film.
Verbinski was born in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, the fourth of five children of Laurette Ann (née McGovern) and Victor Vincent Verbinski, a nuclear physicist.[1] [2] His father was of Polish descent.[1] [3]
Verbinski was active in several L.A. rock bands early in his career. He played guitar in the Daredevils, Bulldozer with John Thum, Mike Parma and Wiggy, The Drivers, and the all-star band The Cylon Boys Choir. He was also in a band called The Little Kings, which backed Stiv Bators on his version of "Have Love Will Travel" with amateur drummer Chris "Poobah" Bailey. Along with a cover of the Moody Blues song "The Story in Your Eyes" (by other musicians), the song was released by Bators in the Fall of 1986 as a 12-inch single on Bomp! (catalogue #12136) and was later included in Bators' compilation album L.A. L.A. On the compilation album's liner notes, label owner Greg Shaw described the band as "an adequate but rootless Hollywood glam-damaged band with tattoos".
His first films were a series of 8 mm films called The Driver Files c. 1979, when he was a young teen. After graduating from film school at UCLA, he got his first job as a script reader at the commercial production company Limelight in 1987. After director Julien Temple viewed some of his work, he signed to his production company Nitrate Films, and later Palomar Pictures,[4] where he directed music videos for bands like Vicious Rumors, Bad Religion, NOFX, 24-7 Spyz and Monster Magnet. Verbinski moved from music videos to commercials, where he worked for many brand names including Nike, Coca-Cola, Canon, Skittles and United Airlines. One of his most famous commercials was for Budweiser, featuring frogs who croak the brand name. For his efforts in commercials, Verbinski won four Clio Awards and one Cannes Advertising Silver Lion.
After completing a short film, The Ritual (which he both wrote and directed), Verbinski made his feature film directing debut in 1997 with Mouse Hunt, which became a global hit. Following that film's success, Verbinski planned and developed several aborted projects; The Sky Is Falling,[5] Mission to Mars,[6] Where the Wild Things Are,[7] The Big Ticket,[8] The Light Princess[9] and an unpublished manuscript by William Monahan titled The Lighthouse.[10]
Verbinski returned in 2001 with the action/comedy The Mexican, starring Julia Roberts and Brad Pitt. The film received mixed reviews, and performed modestly at the box-office, earning $68 million domestically which was quite meager considering its star power (it was technically successful due to its moderately low $38 million budget). Verbinski followed it up with the horror film remake The Ring (2002), which struck gold globally, grossing well over $200 million worldwide. Verbinski also had a directorial hand in The Time Machine that year, temporarily taking over for an exhausted Simon Wells.[11] Verbinski directed some of the underground Morlock sequences and is given a "Thanks to" credit in the film.
He then directed the very successful which earned over $600 million at the international box office. This was his first collaboration with producer Jerry Bruckheimer, whom he has since collaborated with on several other movies. His next film was The Weather Man, which starred Nicolas Cage. The film received mixed to positive reviews but was a box office failure. In March 2005, he started filming the sequels and . The former then became his biggest success so far, becoming the third film ever to gross over $1 billion at the international box office. In 2008, Verbinski's Blind Wink production company signed a deal with Universal.[12] Verbinski was also set to direct a film for Universal based on the video game BioShock.[13] However, budgetary and creative disputes stemming from Verbinski's wish to incorporate a functioning underwater rail transport system, driven by his noted fascination with trains, derailed development. Verbinski was then replaced by Juan Carlos Fresnadillo as director and the film was subsequently cancelled.[14]
In 2011 and 2013, Verbinski would delve into the Western genre, with decidedly different results: Rango was well received, critically and commercially, and earned the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature. However, his adaptation of the 1930s radio hero, The Lone Ranger for Disney, was not, the project having been stuck in development hell for several years, undergone rewrites and budget cuts,[15] and gained controversy for the casting of Johnny Depp as the Native American Tonto. The film grossed $260 million against a $215–225 million budget, plus an estimated $150–160 million marketing campaign.[16] That same year, he was also the executive producer of the Ben Stiller adaptation of The Secret Life of Walter Mitty, after having initially been attached in 2010 to direct the film himself.[17]
In 2012, Verbinski announced three films in development at Blind Wink; the Western Bitterroot, the sci-fi film Spaceless, and a live action film based on the board game Clue. At various points, he was attached to direct all three films, before eventually opting to produce instead.[18]
In 2016, Verbinski's horror film A Cure for Wellness starring Dane DeHaan and Mia Goth premiered at the Alamo Drafthouse before receiving a wide release in 2017.[19] It received mediocre reviews from critics and was a financial bomb, grossing $26.6 million against a $40 million budget.[20] Verbinski was set to next direct a film centering around the character Gambit, within the X-Men film universe, before dropping out of the project in January 2018.[21]
In the 2020s, he was seeking financial backing for Cattywumpus, an animated feature about cats in outer space, after being in the works at Netflix.[22]
Verbinski was involved with Matter, an original futuristic videogame that was being developed for the Xbox 360 using Kinect. Announced at E3 2012, Verbinski later confirmed that the game is now cancelled.
Year | Title | Director | Producer | Writer | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1996 | The Ritual | Short film | |||
1997 | Mouse Hunt | ||||
2001 | The Mexican | ||||
2002 | The Ring | ||||
2003 | |||||
2005 | The Weather Man | ||||
2006 | |||||
2007 | |||||
2011 | Rango | Also voice of the character Sergeant Turley | |||
2013 | The Lone Ranger | ||||
2016 | A Cure for Wellness | ||||
TBA | Good Luck, Have Fun, Don't Die | Filming | |||
Executive producer
Year | Title | Artist | |
---|---|---|---|
1989 | "S&M Airlines" | NOFX | |
1990 | "Don't Wait for Me" | ||
1990 | "Fast and Frightening" | L7 | |
1991 | "Children" | Vicious Rumors | |
1992 | "Stuntman" | ||
"Atomic Garden" | |||
1993 | "American Jesus" | ||
1994 | "21st Century (Digital Boy)" | ||
"Stranger than Fiction" | |||
1995 | "Negasonic Teenage Warhead" | ||
2004 | "Born Too Slow" | The Crystal Method |
Award | Year | Category | Nominated work | Result | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Academy Awards | 2012 | Best Animated Feature | Rango | [23] | ||
Amanda Awards | 2004 | Best Foreign Feature Film | Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl | [24] | ||
Annie Awards | 2012 | Outstanding Directing | Rango | [25] | ||
Outstanding Writing | ||||||
BAFTA Awards | 2012 | Best Animated Film | [26] | |||
Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity Awards | 1995 | Silver Lion | Budweiser: "Frogs" | [27] | ||
Golden Globe Awards | 2012 | Best Animated Feature Film | Rango | [28] | ||
Golden Raspberry Awards | 2014 | Worst Director | The Lone Ranger | [29] | ||
Hollywood Film Awards | 2003 | Movie of the Year | Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl | [30] | ||
2011 | Animation of the Year | Rango | [31] | |||
Hugo Awards | 2004 | Best Dramatic Presentation – Long Form | Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl | [32] | ||
Producers Guild of America Awards | 2012 | Outstanding Producer of Animated Theatrical Motion Pictures | Rango | [33] | ||
Saturn Awards | 2004 | Best Director | Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl | [34] |
Year | Film | Academy Awards | BAFTA Awards | Golden Globe Awards | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nominations | Wins | Nominations | Wins | Nominations | Wins | |||
2003 | 5 | 5 | 1 | 1 | ||||
2006 | 4 | 1 | 5 | 1 | 1 | |||
2007 | 2 | 1 | ||||||
2011 | Rango | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | ||
2013 | The Lone Ranger | 2 | ||||||
Total | 15 | 2 | 12 | 3 | 3 | 0 |