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William Brent Bell

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Name
  
William Bell

Role
  
Screenwriter

Upcoming movie
  
The Boy


William Brent Bell iamediaimdbcomimagesMMV5BMTQ4ODM5MjIyNl5BMl5

Full Name
  
William Brent Bell

Occupation
  
Film director, screenwriter

Movies
  
The Devil Inside, Wer, Stay Alive, The Boy, Sparkle and Charm

Similar People
  
Simon Quarterman, Matthew Peterman, Fernanda Andrade, Suzan Crowley, Evan Helmuth

The boy director william brent bell red carpet movie premiere interview


William Brent Bell is an American screenwriter and film director, best known for his work in horror films such as The Devil Inside and The Boy.

Contents

William Brent Bell William Brent Bell Wikipedia

The boy director william brent bell behind the scenes movie interview


Life and career

Bell was born in Lexington, Kentucky. Along with writing partner Matthew Peterman, Bell wrote screenplay Mercury, which was bought by Universal Studios with Gale Anne Hurd producing.

Since then, Bell and Peterman set up several film projects at studios. Some include Ignition, a kid's action-drama set up at Warner Bros. with Kurt Russell and Goldie Hawn producing and Illusion, a thriller set up at Walt Disney Pictures. On the television side the duo have created several one-hour TV series including Eye to Eye with Warner Bros. Television and McG, Worthy and McGraw with ABC Television and Tim Minear as well as The Fix with Sarah Timberman and Sony Television. Bell and Peterman have also developed a number of videogames including Master Thief, with John Woo.

Bell's first horror project was as co-writer and director of the horror thriller, Stay Alive, which was produced with McG and Peter Schlessel and financed by Spyglass Entertainment and Endgame Entertainment. Stay Alive was acquired and distributed domestically by Buena Vista Pictures and internationally by Universal Pictures. His second horror film was The Devil Inside, written with Matt Peterman. Produced by Peterman and Morris Paulson, the film stars Fernanda Andrade, Simon Quarterman, Evan Helmuth, and Suzan Crowley, and was released theatrically on January 6. The film topped the US box office on its opening weekend. It was a record-breaking commercial success and grossed roughly $101 million.

In 2013, Bell went into production on his third horror film, Wer which was released by Focus Features. Nav Qateel of Influx Magazine called Wer, "the best Werewolf film I've seen in years, or perhaps, ever." Epic Horror Review wrote, "Wer not only redefines the werewolf movie but also saves it." Wer would go on to be described as, "One of the best films I've seen so far this year and a must to watch." and "a film that you want to not only watch but add to your collection."

In 2014, Bell sold his pilot Posthuman to USA Network and UCP with Jason Blum producing. In 2015, Bell set up a series at Fox entitled Haunted. Bell will direct and write the show and shares executive-producing duties with Chris Morgan of the Fast & Furious franchise. This 20th Century Fox Television production is loosely based on the true story chronicled in the book The Demon of Brownsville Road: A Pittsburgh Family's Battle with Evil.

On July 14, 2014, it was announced that Bell was set to direct a supernatural thriller, The Boy, which Tom Rosenberg and Gary Lucchesi would produce through Lakeshore Entertainment, along with Matt Berenson, Jim Wedaa, and Roy Lee, through Vertigo Entertainment. The script was written by Stacey Menear. On January 23, 2015, Lauren Cohan signed on to star for the lead role in the film. On March 11, 2015, more cast was announced, which included Jim Norton, Diana Hardcastle, Ben Robson, Rupert Evans, and James Russell.

On March 10, 2015, principal photography on The Boy officially begun in Victoria, British Columbia. STX Entertainment acquired the US rights to the film and released it in North America on January 22, 2016, alongside Dirty Grandpa and The 5th Wave. The Boy has grossed $36 million in the US and Canada and $31 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $67 million against a budget of under $10 million. Chris Alexander of ShockTilYouDrop called it "one of the best contemporary wide release horror movies I've seen in years." Joe Leydon criticized the average story line in Variety and commented, "Despite game efforts by the cast, this tepid horror opus is never scary enough to overcome its silly premise." A reviewer for The Wrap wrote the "Scary-Doll Horror Flick Is Creepy and Clever".

References

William Brent Bell Wikipedia