Catherine Hardwicke

Film director

Birthday October 21, 1955

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Harlingen, Texas, U.S.

Age 68 years old

Nationality United States

#24421 Most Popular

1955

Helen Catherine Hardwicke (born October 21, 1955) is an American film director, production designer, and screenwriter.

Hardwicke was born in Harlingen, Texas on October 21, 1955, the daughter of Jamee Elberta (née Bennett) and John Benjamin Hardwicke.

She has a brother, Jack, and a sister, Irene Hardwicke Olivieri, who became an artist.

She grew up in McAllen on the U.S.–Mexico border, where her family owned and operated a farm along the Rio Grande, and was raised as a Presbyterian.

Growing up in McAllen, Hardwicke describes it as "wild": in high school, "her principal was stabbed three times. A friend's father was shot in the back, and another friend was murdered. And yet life could be wonderful at the same time. 'It was a Huck Finn life, too,' she said."

As a child she did not attend many movies and explains, "I didn’t go to many movies. Let's be honest: It was a cultural wasteland. At the time, you could not go to a significant museum unless you drove three hours to Corpus Christi or four to San Antonio".

However, there were other ways to have fun such as sneaking over to the bars and nightclubs of Mexico before she was even a legal adult.

Speaking on her early life Hardwicke says, "It was a wonderful childhood. I'm dying to make a movie about it".

She graduated from McAllen High School and went to the University of Texas at Austin, where she earned a degree in architecture.

Among her post-graduation projects was designing the solar townhouse complex built around a man-made lake on the 20-acre site, complete with waterfalls and swimming pools.

The property was owned by her father.

After graduating from her hometown high school, McAllen High School, Hardwicke went on to attend the University of Texas at Austin.

Studying Architecture, Hardwicke felt that she had far too much creativity for that field, stating: "I was a little out there for architecture school. I would dress up like my building and people were like, 'wow, dude, architecture really doesn’t encourage that type of creativity'."Feeling limited, Hardwicke moved to Los Angeles, where she studied at UCLA film school to explore her creative talents.

Hardwicke made her first short film for her brother Jack who was marrying Nicolette Cullen.

1980

During this period in the 1980s, Hardwicke made an award-winning short, Puppy Does the Gumbo and was recognized with a Nissan Focus Award and was featured in the Landmark Best of UCLA film program.

Hardwicke became a production designer, working with film directors such as Cameron Crowe, Richard Linklater, and David O. Russell.

She was influenced by them, gaining experience in their techniques, and learning informal aspects from professional conversations.

She talked to some about her desire to be a filmmaker, and received advice and tips.

While working with such big-name directors, she was able to study their techniques: "I always told them I really want to make my own movies, and they were all very generous and gave me tips."

Her career as a production designer was crucial and beneficial to the molding of her career as a director.

Her time spent with these directors aided her and were able to give her a sense of direction: "As you’re riding around with the director location scouting, you hear a lot of conversations and you start piecing them together, so I think that helped me."

1990

Through the 1990s and early 2000s, Hardwicke worked as a production designer on films including Tombstone (1993), Tank Girl (1995), 2 Days in the Valley (1996), The Newton Boys (1998), Three Kings (1999), and Antitrust (2001).

2000

In 2000, she worked as production designer with director/screenwriter Cameron Crowe and actor/producer Tom Cruise on Vanilla Sky (2001).

Hardwicke's first film as a director was developed in collaboration with then-fourteen-year-old Nikki Reed, who wrote a screenplay that reflected some of Reed's teenage experiences.

Hardwicke had known Reed since she was five years old, as she had been in a relationship with Reed's father.

After the relationship ended, she continued to stay close with Reed.

Hardwicke said "I started getting my hair cut by her mother, which is similar to the film, so I saw them every few months" she continues to say, "when [Nikki] turned thirteen, I started noticing she had completely changed to becoming quite angry with her family, her mother, and herself. I started seeing all these changes and difficulties she was going through, so I thought, along with her parents, that if she could hang out with me, things would get better".

Throughout the time they spent together, Reed had revealed to Hardwicke that she was interested in acting which was the spark that ignited Thirteen.

They completed the script in six days during Christmas break.

When asked why there was an urgency to make the film, Hardwicke replied with "I felt it was almost like a snapshot of a particular time. I really wanted Nikki to be in it, because her energy was so inspiring to it, and I don't like the movies where the person is eighteen years old playing a thirteen-year-old, so I said, 'We're going to shoot it even if it's with a digital camera and me as the whole crew."' Evan Rachel Wood was contracted to star in the movie alongside Reed.

The film tackles difficulties of contemporary teenagers.

A young teen loses her innocence in a rapid spiral of events, with disturbing portrayals of drug, sex, theft, and dropping out of school.

Capturing a range in high impact emotions, the film encapsulates the realness and authenticity of teen angst, that which includes mood changes and forming identities.

"Instead of The Lizzie McGuire Movie, Hardwicke and Reed create an eye-opening portal into the life of teenagers growing up at an alarmingly young age; the anarchic friendship between Tracy (Evan Rachel Wood) and Evie (Reed) leads to a chaotic chain of events that include drugs, sexual encounters with a guy twice their age, and self-mutilation."

Reed and Hardwicke wrote the script from the point of view of Tracy, a "normal" 13-year-old who begins at a new middle school.

There she meets Evie, who she thinks of as more advanced and whom she wants to impress.

2002

She even worked with fellow female director Lisa Cholodenko on her film Laurel Canyon (2002).

Aside from her time spent working alongside directors, Hardwicke continued to work on her own projects such as scripts, short films, and teaching herself Final Cut Pro.

Hardwicke even took it upon herself to take acting classes to become a better director.

2003

Her directorial work includes Thirteen (2003), which she co-wrote with Nikki Reed, the film's co-star, Lords of Dogtown (2005), The Nativity Story (2006), Twilight (2008), Red Riding Hood (2011), Plush (2013), Miss You Already (2015), Miss Bala (2019), and Prisoner's Daughter (2022).