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John Landis Biography and Filmography
John Landis
Birthday: August 3, 1950
Birth Place: Chicago, Illinois, USA
Height: 0' 0"
Below is a complete filmography (list of movies he's appeared in)
for John Landis.
If you have any corrections or additions, please email us.
We'd also be interested in any trivia or other information you have.
Biography
With as much monkeying-around as his movies frequently display, it should come as no surprise to John Landis fans that one of his earliest inspirations as a filmmaker was the original 1933 version of King Kong. The man behind such carefree comedies as Animal House, Landis has also helped to blur the lines between comedy and horror with such efforts as An American Werewolf in London and Innocent Blood, in addition to crafting such fine-tined social satire as Trading Places. Born in Chicago in August of 1950, Landis originally worked in the mailroom at Fox and later as a stuntman before making a name for himself as a director. Landis was in his early twenties when he decided it was time to make a feature, and after a brief flirtation with the idea of crafting an underground porn film, the aspiring director raised the funding needed for his directorial debut from family and friends. The result of his tireless efforts was the relentlessly juvenile but infectiously silly Schlock (aka The Banana Monster [1973]). Featuring the director himself dressed in a cheap monkey costume (designed by frequent collaborator Rick Baker) and terrorizing a California town, the film opened a door for Landis when David Zucker spotted him discussing the film on The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. Mentioning to friend Robert Weiss that he was impressed with the young filmmaker's energy, Weiss remarked that he was friends with Landis, and the result was The Kentucky Fried Movie (1977). A dream collaboration in anarchic humor, the wildly irreverent, non sequitur humor of The Kentucky Fried Movie struck a chord with audiences fueled on Saturday Night Live, and natural progression lead to the breakthrough comedy Animal House the following year. Based on the writer's college exploits and shot in a mere 28 days, Animal House proved an unmitigated smash hit at the box office despite nearly unanimous critical denouncement. Though critical evisceration would become a trademark of Landis films, the following decade found the now-established director in his prime. Given free reign over his next film by Universal, rumors still persist that The Blues Brothers was the first film in cinematic history to begin production without a finalized budget. A loud and spectacular collage of driving blues music and eye-popping car crashes, the film not only made the world record for the number of cars crashed in a movie, but proved an even bigger hit than Animal House. For his next film, Landis utilized a script he had penned while in Yugoslavia working as a gofer on Kelly's Heroes in 1969. Though An American Werewolf in London may not have been the first horror film to utilize comedy, its truly terrifying scenes contrasted by an ample dose of dark humor proved the spark that would ignite the horror comedy genre later expanded on by the likes of Sam Raimi and Peter Jackson. Yet another runaway hit at the box office, An American Werewolf in London's shockingly frightful visuals earned makeup artist Baker the first ever Academy Award to be bestowed upon a special effects artist. As successful as Landis' career had been to date, trouble was on the way when filming of Twilight Zone: The Movie was ground to a halt following the accidental on-set death of star Vic Morrow and two juvenile actors. When special effects caused a helicopter to crash, killing all three passengers instantly, the director, as well as three other technicians who were working on the film, were charged with involuntary manslaughter. Though all would eventually be found not guilty in the case, the trial would drag on for a decade. Despite the tragedy that beset the production of Twilight Zone, Landis would score a massive hit that same year by wolfing it up with pop-superstar Michael Jackson as the director of Thriller. The remainder of the 1980s found Landis scoring mild box-office hits with such efforts as Spies Like Us (1985) and Three Amigios! (1986), though it wasn't until Coming to America (1988) that he would score another direct hit. An ideal vehicle for Eddie Murphy, the film brought the gifted comic actor back into the realm of straight laughs following the one-two action punch of The Golden Child and Beverly Hills Cop II. Though Landis would once again team with Murphy for the third installment of the Beverly Hills Cop franchise, audiences had tired of the comic's wisecracking cop by the mid-'90s, and following on the lackluster performance of Oscar (1991) and Innocent Blood (1992), the director's career went into a bit of a slump. Landis did, however, find moderate success at this point in his career as the catalyst and sometimes director of the popular HBO series Dream On. When it was announced in the late '90s that Landis was set to helm a sequel to The Blues Brothers, fans were left scratching their heads in wonder as to how the film could recapture the chemistry between John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd that had played such an integral part in the success of the original. A rare instance in Landis' career in which critics and audiences agreed, Blues Brothers 2000 immediately tanked at the box office as mournful fans of the original struggled to comprehend how and why this could have happened. Released straight to video that same year, Susan's Plan offered an equally abysmal attempt at comedy that went largely unseen. As willing to jump in front of the camera as behind, Landis has frequently displayed his healthy sense of humor by appearing in such films as The Muppets Take Manhattan (1984), Darkman (1990), Vampirella (1996), and 2001 Maniacs (2003). In addition to the frequent use of the phrase "See you next Tuesday" in his films, in-jokes abound and fans can always count on the director to break out the old monkey suit for a laugh if all else fails.
Filmography
Gone (2007)
Show Dogs (2007)
Bat Boy (2007)
Epic Proportions (2006)
Deer Woman (2005)
Slasher (2004)
Michael Jackson: Number Ones (2003)
[ Martin Scorsese ]
Susan's Plan (1998)
[ Billy Zane ][ Dan Aykroyd ][ Rob Schneider ][ Michael Biehn ][ Thomas Haden Church ]
Blues Brothers 2000 (1998)
[ Dan Aykroyd ][ John Goodman ][ Frank Oz ][ Isaac Hayes ][ Joe Morton ]
Michael Jackson: HIStory on Film - Volume II (1997)
[ Spike Lee ][ Michael Jackson ]
The Stupids (1996)
[ Christopher Lee ][ Bug Hall ][ Frankie Faison ][ Matt Keeslar ][ Mark Metcalf ]
Michael Jackson: Video Greatest Hits - HIStory (1995)
[ Martin Scorsese ][ Michael Jackson ][ John Singleton ]
Beverly Hills Cop III (1994)
[ Eddie Murphy ][ Judge Reinhold ][ Bronson Pinchot ][ Hector Elizondo ][ Jon Tenney ]
Dangerous: The Short Films (1993)
[ Eddie Murphy ][ Macaulay Culkin ][ Dan Castellaneta ][ Michael Jackson ][ John Singleton ]
Oral Sex, Lies and Videotape (1993)
Come and Knock on Our Door... (1992)
Nightmare on Bleecker Street (1992)
Innocent Blood (1992)
[ Frank Sinatra ][ Frank Oz ][ Anthony Lapaglia ][ Chazz Palminteri ][ Robert Loggia ]
It Came from Beneath the Sink (1992)
Black or White (1991)
[ Macaulay Culkin ][ Michael Jackson ][ George Wendt ]
Oscar (1991)
[ Sylvester Stallone ][ Tim Curry ][ Kirk Douglas ][ Harry Shearer ][ Kurtwood Smith ]
Disneyland's 35th Anniversary Special (1990)
[ Jim Varney ]
Coming to America (1988)
[ Samuel L. Jackson ][ Eddie Murphy ][ Cuba Gooding Jr. ][ James Earl Jones ][ Eriq La Salle ]
Amazon Women on the Moon (1987)
[ Joe Pantoliano ][ Phil Hartman ][ Steve Guttenberg ][ Robert Loggia ][ Andrew Dice Clay ]
¡Three Amigos! (1986)
[ Steve Martin ][ Chevy Chase ][ Phil Hartman ][ Jon Lovitz ][ Martin Short ]
Spies Like Us (1985)
[ Dan Aykroyd ][ Chevy Chase ][ Frank Oz ][ Bob Hope ][ Bruce Davison ]
Disneyland's 30th Anniversary Celebration (1985)
Into the Night (1985)
[ Dan Aykroyd ][ Jeff Goldblum ][ Bruce McGill ][ Jim Henson ][ Richard Farnsworth ]
Michael Jackson: Making Michael Jackson's 'Thriller' (1983)
Thriller (1983)
[ Vincent Price ]
Twilight Zone: The Movie (1983)
[ Steven Spielberg ][ Dan Aykroyd ][ John Lithgow ][ Albert Brooks ][ Burgess Meredith ]
Trading Places (1983)
[ Eddie Murphy ][ Dan Aykroyd ][ Frank Oz ][ James Belushi ][ Paul Gleason ]
Coming Soon (1982)
An American Werewolf in London (1981)
[ Frank Oz ][ Rik Mayall ][ Griffin Dunne ][ David Naughton ]
The Blues Brothers (1980)
[ Dan Aykroyd ][ John Candy ][ Frank Oz ][ Paul Reubens ][ John Belushi ]
Animal House (1978)
[ Kevin Bacon ][ Donald Sutherland ][ John Belushi ][ Tom Hulce ][ Tim Matheson ]
The Kentucky Fried Movie (1977)
[ Donald Sutherland ][ Leslie Nielsen ][ George Lazenby ]
Schlock (1973)
Trivia
  • The trademark trivia often mentioned in Landis directed films, the inclusion in some form of the phrase "See you next Wednesday" is a reference to a line in the Stanley Kubrick film '2001: A Space Odyssey' where astronaut Frank Poole watches a video sent to him by his wife and father on the occasion of his birthday. At the end of the video his wife says, "See you next Wednesday!" an obvious reference to their next available time to transmitt a message to the distant space craft bound for Jupiter, though since Frank is killed within the next day or two by HAL, it is perhaps meant as an ironic trademark since it seems to occur in Landis films when characters are in great danger. It appears during the werewolf rampage as the title on the marquee of a porno theater in 'American Werewolf In London". It is spoken in German when a Vic Morrow is being shot at on the building in the sequence he directed for 'Twighlight Zone The Movie'. In the original 'Blues Brothers' it's on a billboard where the the cops are laying in wait. Then again, it mostly appears as the name on movie posters, so that it probably became merely something to watch for like Hitchcock's cameos... It first appeared in his first film "Schlock' as the name of a movie and as a movie poster in a theater lobby. It appeared again in his second film as a title of the "Feel-O-Rama" movie in 'Kentucky Fried Movie'. It surfaces in an apartment in 'Trading Places' on a movie poster. In 'Coming to America' it appears in a subway station (the movie claims to star Jamie Lee Curtis, who appeared in Landis' Trading Places (1983)). Another poster is visible in Ophelia's apartment. In 'Spies Like Us' it appears on the recruitment poster behind the desk of the commander of the army training post. In 'Into The Night' it appears on appears on two posters in the office where Ed and Diana make the phone call. In 'Innocent Blood' it is once again advertised on a movie marquee across the street from the Melody Lounge exotic dance bar near where a car crash takes place. It also appears in the Michael Jackson video "Thriller", which was directed by Landis. One of the men chasing the werewolf finds a note and reads this out while the shot shows MJ in the theater eating popcorn.
  • In his early career he worked as a stunt-man specialising in horse-falls.
  • He directed the music videos "Thriller" and "Black Or White" both by Michael Jackson. He has a small cameo as the director in "Black Or White".
  • Father of Max Landis and Rachel Landis.
  • After he dropped out of school at age 17 he worked as mailman at the Fox studios.
  • Went to school with Eliza Roberts.
  • Biography in: John Wakeman, editor. "World Film Directors, Volume Two, 1945-1985". Pages 555-559. New York: The H.W. Wilson Company, 1988.
  • Has never shot a film in the 2.35:1 aspect ratio.
  • Once worked as an attendant in a parking lot.
  • One of his favorite movies is "Charme discret de la bourgeoisie, Le" He admits that this film inspired the use of the dream within a dream gag in "An American Werewolf in London"
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