Joe Wright

Film director

Birthday August 25, 1972

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace London, England

Age 51 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

#10097 Most Popular

1972

Joseph Wright (born 25 August 1972) is an English film director.

1990

During the 1990s, he worked at Oil Factory, a music video production company based in Caledonian Road, Kings Cross.

He worked on a variety of productions in numerous roles, including casting director.

Here he was able to get the opportunity to direct some music videos.

Alongside this, particularly on the strength of his short film work, he was also developing The End, his second short film.

During this decade he also worked part-time as a roadie for Vegetable Vision, who created visuals for electronic music bands such as Chemical Brothers, Darren Emerson, Underworld and Andrew Weatherall.

Wright attributes some of the aesthetic and emotion of the UK rave scene as an influence on his work.

2000

On the success of his first short film, Wright was offered the script for the serial Nature Boy (2000).

2002

He followed this up with the serials Bodily Harm (2002) with Timothy Spall and the highly acclaimed Charles II: The Power and the Passion (2003) with Rufus Sewell, which won the BAFTA Award for Best Drama Serial.

In 2022, Wright began directing an eight-part adaptation of the bestselling novel M: Son of the Century, a historical novel by Antonio Scurati recounting the rise of Italian dictator Benito Mussolini.

In 2023, Wright was developing an adaptation for HBO of the bestselling non-fiction book Empty Mansions: The Mysterious Life of Huguette Clark and the Spending of a Great American Fortune about heiress Huguette Clark, daughter of copper baron and United States Senator William A. Clark.

2005

His motion pictures include the literary adaptations Pride & Prejudice (2005), Atonement (2007), Anna Karenina (2012), and Cyrano (2021), the action thriller Hanna (2011), Peter Pan origin story Pan (2015), and Darkest Hour (2017), a political drama following Winston Churchill during World War II nominated for Best Picture.

Wright always had an interest in the arts, especially painting.

He also made films on his Super 8 camera and spent time in the evenings acting in a drama club.

Wright is dyslexic.

He went to Islington Green Secondary School, but left without any GCSEs.

He began his career working at his parents' puppet theatre, the Little Angel Theatre in Islington.

He also took classes at the Anna Scher Theatre School and acted professionally on stage and camera.

He spent an art foundation year at Camberwell College of Arts, before taking a degree in fine art and film at Central St Martins where he was tutored by Malcolm Le Grice and Vera Neubauer.

In his last year of studies he received a scholarship to make a short film for the BBC that won several awards.

In 2005, Wright made the transition to feature films with his critically acclaimed adaptation of Pride & Prejudice starring Keira Knightley and Matthew Macfadyen.

It received numerous accolades, nominations and awards, including four Academy Award nominations (including Best Actress) and six BAFTA nominations (Wright won for Most Promising Newcomer).

2007

Wright's next feature was an adaptation of Ian McEwan's Booker Prize-shortlisted novel Atonement (2007), which reunited Wright with Keira Knightley, and also stars James McAvoy and Saoirse Ronan.

It was nominated for seven Golden Globe Awards, more than any other film that year.

Though Wright was not nominated for director, the film received seven Academy Award nominations, winning only for Best Original Score.

At the BAFTA Awards it received 14 nominations and won Best Film and Best Production Design.

Wright's next film was The Soloist, starring Jamie Foxx and Robert Downey, Jr. It is about the "true story of musical prodigy Nathaniel Ayers, who developed schizophrenia in his second year at Juilliard and ended up homeless on the streets of downtown L.A. where he performs the violin and cello."

2008

It was to be released on 21 November 2008, but was pushed back to 24 April 2009.

2011

Wright reunited with Atonement star Saoirse Ronan for the 2011 action thriller Hanna.

The title character is a 15-year-old girl trained since birth to be an assassin by her father (Eric Bana), a rogue CIA asset.

It received mostly positive reviews, with Roger Ebert calling it a "first-rate thriller".

It received an aggregate score of 65 from Metacritic ("generally positive" reviews).

2012

Wright directed the 2012 screen adaptation by Sir Tom Stoppard of Leo Tolstoy's classic novel Anna Karenina.

The cast included Keira Knightley as Anna, Jude Law as her husband, Aaron Taylor-Johnson as her young love, Irish actor Domhnall Gleeson as Konstantin Levin, as well as Kelly Macdonald, Olivia Williams, Matthew Macfadyen, and Michelle Dockery.

Saoirse Ronan and Andrea Riseborough were initially cast, but dropped out and were replaced by Alicia Vikander and Ruth Wilson, respectively.

2013

The screenplay by actor-turned-screenwriter Jason Fuchs was from the 2013 Hollywood Black List, a selection of popular unproduced scripts.

The film was negatively received by critics and was considered a commercial flop, failing to recoup its budget at the box office.

Rooney Mara's casting as Tiger Lily caused a controversy, due to her being of European ancestry, while Tiger Lily is traditionally portrayed as Native American.

2015

Wright then directed the 2015 prequel to Peter Pan for Warner Bros. The film starred Hugh Jackman, Garrett Hedlund, Rooney Mara, Amanda Seyfried and Levi Miller as Peter.

2017

Wright's 2017 film Darkest Hour covers a pivotal month in the life of former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill.