Dwight H. Little Explained

Other Names:Dwight Little
Birth Name:Dwight Hubbard Little
Birth Date:13 January 1956
Birth Place:Cleveland, Ohio, US
Children:3
Occupation:Film director
Years Active:1982−present

Dwight Hubbard Little (born January 13, 1956) is an American film and television director, known for directing the films Marked for Death, Rapid Fire, , Murder at 1600 and . He has also directed several episodes of acclaimed television series such as 24, Prison Break, Dollhouse, Bones and Nikita. Little was born in Cleveland, Ohio. He studied film at USC.[1]

Career

Dwight Little got his first break in the film business when producer Sandy Howard asked him to shoot additional material for Triumphs of a Man Called Horse. Howard needed the film to be longer in order to be able to sell it oversees. When Little was finished, Howard asked him to make him an action film for the video market. Little made for a budget of 300,000 dollars. From that film, Little edited a show-reel that got him the attention of several members of the Hunt-Hill family from Texas who asked him to make an action film. This became Getting Even. According to Little, the film was devised around everything the family members owned: helicopters, a ranch, a Learjet. Little was then asked by Nico Mastorakis to direct the action adventure film Bloodstone in India.

Little's first chance at directing a union film was . Little rejected the treatment that was written by John Carpenter and Debra Hill and pitched producer Moustapha Akkad the idea for what became Halloween 4. On the basis of Halloween 4, Steven Seagal asked Little to direct his next film, which was Hard to Kill. But the studio (Warner) vetoed Seagal's choice of director and went for Bruce Malmuth instead. Little went on to make The Phantom of the Opera for producer Menahem Golan. Little got offered , but declined. He worried he would be trapped in the horror genre. Little got a chance to do another action film when Steven Seagal asked Little to direct Marked for Death. The film became a modest hit and Little got a chance to make Rapid Fire for the same studio (Fox), which was an attempt to launch the career of Brandon Lee as an in-house action star for Fox.

While reading an article on how the Navy had a term for when they lose a nuclear missile, Little got the idea for Broken Arrow. He pitched it at Fox. The studio asked writer Graham Yost to develop the script with Little, with Little being attached to direct. But when the script was finished early and Fox wanted to head into production, Little was still editing . He decided to finish Free Willy 2 at Warner. Fox asked John Woo to direct Broken Arrow, while giving Little an executive producer's credit. Little says Woo's film bares little resemblance to what he envisioned. "I wanted to do a Tom Clancy type thriller (...). John Woo made it much lighter. John Travolta played it over the top. The movie was tongue-in-cheek and campy. But you can’t blame him, because it made a lot of money."

Because Warner was pleased with how Free Willy 2 turned out, Little got the chance to direct Murder at 1600, a conspiracy thriller starring Wesley Snipes and Diane Lane. The studio had promised Little that Murder at 1600 would open in January 1997, while Clint Eastwood's Absolute Power would open in April of the same year. A test screening was held of Murder at 1600 in December 1996. The response was positive. According to Little, somebody for Eastwood's production company Malpaso heard about the excellent test screening of Murder at 1600 and told Eastwood about it. Little: "I’m not sure Clint was even aware of our movie, but he (...) went to Bob Daly and Terry Semel, who were the chiefs at Warner Brothers, and demanded that Absolute Power be released first. He’s a smart guy. He doesn’t want to be second with another White House thriller. So we get a call that our movie was pushed back to April. It was so disappointing. Every review said: Just like last month’s Absolute Power… We looked like the copycat."

After directing mostly television for almost twenty years, Little returned to feature film making with the true crime drama Last Rampage, based on the non-fiction book Last Rampage: The Escape of Gary Tison by University of Arizona Political Science Professor James W. Clarke. The film deals with events that happened in 1978, when convicted murderer Gary Tison, played by Robert Patrick, escaped from prison with the help of his three sons. Heather Graham stars as his wife and Bruce Davison as the lawman who heads the manhunt. Little got the book from his stepson, actor Jason James Richter. Last Rampage was reviewed favorably by Variety, who praised "the no-frills efficiency" and "the brisk and suspenseful narrative".[2] Rex Reed of The Observer called the film "grim and hopelessly despondent, but superbly acted and strangely effective."[3] Little himself called it "the most honest" of his films.

Filmography

YearTitleDirectorExecutive
Producer
WriterNotes
1985
1986Getting Even
1988Bloodstone
[4]
1989The Phantom of the Opera[5] [6]
1990Marked for Death
1992Rapid Fire
1995as Dwight Little
1996Broken Arrowas Dwight Little; Directed by John Woo
1997Murder at 1600as Dwight Little
2004as Dwight Little
2010Tekkenas Dwight Little
2017Last Rampageas Dwight Little
2023Natty Knocks

Television

TV movies

TV series

YearTitleNotes
1989Freddy's Nightmaresas Dwight Little; Episode: "Do Dreams Bleed?"
1997-99Millenniumas Dwight Little; 3 episodes
1998-02The Practiceas Dwight Little; 9 episodes
1999Strange World
2001Wolf Lakeas Dwight Little; Episode: "The Changing"
Citizen Bainesas Dwight Little; Episode: "Lost and Found"
2002The X-Filesas Dwight Little; Episode: "Scary Monsters"
John Doeas Dwight Little; Episode: "Low Art"
2003as Dwight Little; Episode: "Avalon"
2005as Dwight Little; Episode: "Vigilante"
Just Legalas Dwight Little; Episode: "The Black Box"
2005-06The Insideas Dwight Little; 2 episodes
2005-09Prison Breakas Dwight Little; 5 episodes
200624as Dwight Little; 2 episodes
Vanishedas Dwight Little; Episode: "The Black Box"
Day Breakas Dwight Little; Episode: "What If They're Stuck?"
2006-17Bonesas Dwight Little; 23 episodes
2009Castleas Dwight Little; Episode: "Inventing the Girl"
Dollhouseas Dwight Little; 2 episodes
2010Tower Prepas Dwight Little; Episode: "Field Trip"
2011Body of Proofas Dwight Little; Episode: "Second Chances"
as Dwight Little; Episode: "Night Hawks"
2011-13Nikitaas Dwight Little; 5 episodes
2011-14Drop Dead Divaas Dwight Little; 4 episodes
2012The Finderas Dwight Little; Episode: "Little Mean Green"
2014Matadoras Dwight Little; Episode: "Enter the Worm"
2014-16Sleepy Hollowas Dwight Little; 3 episodes
as Dwight Little; 4 episodes
2014-17Scorpionas Dwight Little; 3 episodes
2015Arrowas Dwight Little; Episode: "Public Enemy"
Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.as Dwight Little; Episode: Among Us Hide...
2017Daytime Divasas Dwight Little; Episode: "Truth's a Mutha"
20229-1-1as Dwight Little; Episode: "Boston"

Video games director

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Dwight Little interview. 2021-05-23. THE FLASHBACK FILES. en-US.
  2. Web site: Leydon. Joe. 2017-09-22. Film Review: 'Last Rampage: The Escape of Gary Tison'. 2021-05-23. Variety. en-US.
  3. Web site: 2017-09-26. Grim 'Last Rampage' Saved by Superb Acting. 2021-05-23. Observer. en-US.
  4. Book: Muir, John Kenneth. Horror Films of the 1980s. Daniel Chung. 2007. 978-0786455010. 654.
  5. Web site: Schoelen, Jill (Final Girls). Dread Central. 30 May 2013.
  6. News: 'Phantom' Appeal Is Wearing Thin. https://archive.today/20130630042311/http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/chicagotribune/access/7823994.html?dids=7823994:7823994&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=current&date=Nov+07,+1989&author=Kehr,+Dave&pub=Chicago+Tribune&desc='Phantom'+Appeal+Is+Wearing+Thin&pqatl=google. dead. June 30, 2013. Kehr. Dave. Nov 7, 1989. Chicago Tribune. 30 May 2013.