Doug Liman

Film director

Birthday July 24, 1965

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace New York City, U.S.

Age 58 years old

Nationality United States

#10528 Most Popular

1965

Douglas Eric Liman (born July 24, 1965) is an American film director and producer.

1988

He also co-founded the NACB, the first trade association geared to student-staffed radio and television stations, in 1988.

1993

Liman attended the graduate program at University of Southern California, where he was tapped to helm his first project in 1993, the comedy film Getting In.

1996

He is known for directing the films Swingers (1996), Go (1999), The Bourne Identity (2002), Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005), Jumper (2008), Edge of Tomorrow (2014), and American Made (2017).

Most of his career has been associated with the production company Hypnotic.

He is co-owner with Dave Bartis, whom he met as an undergraduate at Brown University where they co-founded Brown Television (BTV) and the National Association of College Broadcasters (NACB).

Liman is on the advisory board of the Legal Action Center and the Arthur Liman Public Interest Program at Yale Law School.

Liman, who is Jewish, was born in New York City, the son of Ellen (née Fogelson), a painter and writer, and Arthur L. Liman, a lawyer.

Liman began making short films while still in junior high school and studied at International Center of Photography in New York City.

While attending Brown University, he helped to co-found the student-run cable television station BTV and served as its first station manager.

Liman's first major success was Swingers, released in 1996.

The film, written by Jon Favreau and based on Favreau's life, is a comedy about struggling actors amid the L.A. club milieu.

Liman raised the funding and the film was made on the cheap, starring Favreau and his friends (Vince Vaughn, Ron Livingston, and Patrick Van Horn), ultimately cost $250,000.

The film was a critical success, and jump-started the careers of Liman and the featured actors.

Liman sold the film to Miramax for $5.5 million.

1999

Liman next directed Go (1999), which tracks the events of a drug deal gone wrong through three different points of view as plot lines diverge and reconverge; Liman was also the film's cinematographer.

The film was a modest success, grossing $28.4 million worldwide against a $20 million budget, and garnered positive reviews from critics.

In 1999, Liman shot a commercial for Nike featuring Tiger Woods.

2002

Liman next directed the 2002 action thriller The Bourne Identity starring Matt Damon, an adaptation of the 1980 Robert Ludlum novel. The film was a box office success, earning over $200 million, and began a Bourne film franchise that has since included four additional films.

Liman only directed the first Bourne film, after a notoriously "chaotic" shoot disrupted his relationship with the studio.

2003

Liman executive-produced and directed the first two episodes ("Premiere" and "The Model Home") of the successful Fox prime time drama The O.C. (2003–2007).

Liman produced and directed a series of comedy shorts for the Chrysler Film Project and Cannes Film Festival entitled Indie Is Great.

2004

As he had personally acquired the rights to the franchise from Ludlum, he served as an executive producer for three of the four sequels (2004's The Bourne Supremacy, 2007's The Bourne Ultimatum and 2016's Jason Bourne).

2005

Liman also directed Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005), a comedic thriller about an increasingly distant married couple, both secretly assassins, who are hired to kill each other.

The film was Liman's most commercially successful to date, and is well known for the off-screen romance that developed between stars Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie after making the film.

In 2005, Liman signed on to direct the pilot episode of NBC's television series Heist, which is about a season-long attempt to rob three jewelry stores on Beverly Hills' swanky Rodeo Drive.

Also that same year, the production company Hypnotic has struck a deal with NBC Universal Television Studio.

Shortly afterwards, he renamed the production company from Hypnotic to Dutch Oven.

2008

His film adaptation of Steven Gould's science fiction novel Jumper was released in 2008.

2009

In 2009, he co-founded the website 30ninjas.com which is geared towards fans of action movies and television, gaming, extreme sports and viral videos.

He also maintains a blog on the site.

2010

Liman directed 2010's Fair Game, about the Plame affair, which competed for the Palme d'Or at the 2010 Cannes Film Festival.

2011

In 2011, Liman directed and produced I Just Want My Pants Back, a television series that aired on MTV.

He produced Covert Affairs and Suits, two original series on the USA Network.

2014

He directed the film adaptation of the Hiroshi Sakurazaka novel, All You Need is Kill, released as Edge of Tomorrow (2014), starring Tom Cruise.

2016

In August 2016, Liman signed on to direct Dark Universe, a film set within the DC Extended Universe and based on superhero team Justice League Dark after leaving the adaptation of Gambit. However, Liman has departed from the project due to schedule conflicts with the film Chaos Walking (2021), that Liman was working on that time.

2017

In 2017, he directed Aaron Taylor-Johnson and John Cena in the military thriller The Wall, and directed Cruise again, in the crime-action film American Made, a biopic of pilot Barry Seal.

2020

In January 2020, Liman announced that the Edge of Tomorrow sequel, Live Die Repeat and Repeat, was currently in its early planning stages.

In May 2020, it was reported that Liman would be directing, writing, and producing a fictional movie shot in outer space.

Tom Cruise was set to star and produce.