Tim McCanlies (born 1953) is an American film director and screenwriter. He is best known for writing and directing Secondhand Lions, and for writing the screenplay for The Iron Giant.
Tim McCanlies is a fifth-generationTexan, but rarely called one place home for long. McCanlies’ father was in the Air Force andthe family traveled extensively. In his early years he was interested in bothacting and the technical processes that took place behind the scenes, alongwith the process of filming scenes. By second gradehe was writing his own novels. While he was in high school he did notparticipate in the school's theatre program, but instead went to the localmovie theatre and learned how to run the projector.
McCanlies attended high school in Bryan, Texas and took some college-level courses at nearby Texas A&M University. In 1971, he moved to Austin and enrolled at the University of Texas majoring in Radio-Television-Film. After a couple of years, McCanlies transferred back to Texas A&M. In 1975, he moved to Dallas where he worked as a police officer and took graduate film classes at Southern Methodist University.[1]
Once McCanlies started taking graduate classes at Southern Methodist, he learned proper screenplay techniquesand made several short films that were well accepted in national filmcompetitions. After the making of these films he was offered the opportunity todirect commercials near the Dallas area, but he decided against this and movedto Los Angeles to attempt movie screenplays in 1978. After moving to Los Angeles heplanned on attending the American Film Institute. While he was in L.A. he foundhis first paying job for writing was a low budget film called Crazies. While these low budgetscreenplays did give him experience in the business, it did not pay a greatdeal, so he needed another income. He supported himself during this time by writingcomputer programs. With money being low during this time, McCanlies decided againstenrolling in the Film Institute as he had planned.
McCanlies worked for Walt Disney Studios in the 1980s (The Fox and the Hound) as a story artist and wrote for all the major motion picture studios at one time or another. After signing a two-year contractwith Disney Studios as his first job in the Hollywood system, he pitched hisown screenplay to the studio, but was turned down. After McCanlies' contract with Disney was finished, and after marrying his wife Suzannein 1988, they moved back to Texas. At this time he started to workwith most of the major studios as a script doctor and writer for hire. He worked on films such as Touchstone's Shoot to Kill (1988), Warner Bros’ Little Giants (1994) and My Fellow Americans (1996). Around thistime he was also invited to speak at the first Heart of Austin Heart of TexasFilm Festival and Screenwriters conference in 1994. More recently he adapted a novel written by Turk Pipkin into a film called When Angels Sing.[2]
He started production on his directorial debut, Dancer, Texas Pop. 81, in 1997, thanks to the support from IgniteEntertainment. The film grossed justunder $700,000 in the United States. It was met with mixed reviews, with thefilm staying in theatres longer in McCanlies’ home state of Texas, while beingremoved from New York theatres after only a week. The film began to be playedin other rural areas after its initial release. The film then made its way tothe London Film Festival, as well as playing in Australia.
He wrote the screenplay for The Iron Giantin 1999. The film received universal acclaim and it ranked seventh in Premiere's listof the 100 best movies of 1999, which was a summary of the critics’ picks forthe year. He won multiple awards for his work, including an Annie Award(accomplishments in animation) and an award from the British Academy of Filmand Television Arts.[3]
His second directing project, Secondhand Lions had more success than his first. This film had much more of a draw due to bigger-name actors. It starred Robert Duvall, Michael Caine, and Haley Joel Osment in a story about a young boy staying with his strange uncles for the summer.[4] It was released in 2003 and was met with mostly good reviews, including Roger Ebert giving it three out of four stars.[5]
Year | Title | Credited as | Notes | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Director | Writer | Associate producer | ||||
1983 | Scalps | |||||
1987 | North Shore | |||||
1998 | Dancer, Texas Pop. 81 | |||||
1998 | Dennis the Menace Strikes Again | Direct-to-video | ||||
1999 | The Iron Giant | Annie Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement in Writing in an Animated Feature Production BAFTA Award for Best Feature Film | ||||
2001–2011 | Smallville | 195 episodes | ||||
2003 | Secondhand Lions | |||||
2009 | The 2 Bobs | |||||
2009 | Alabama Moon | |||||
2012 | Angels Sing |