Mike Mills

Director

Popular As Mike Mills (director)

Birthday March 20, 1966

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Berkeley, California, U.S.

Age 57 years old

Nationality United States

#16439 Most Popular

1966

Michael Chadbourne Mills (born March 20, 1966) is an American film and music video director, writer and graphic designer.

1996

The band released one self-titled album in 1996 on the now defunct Grand Royal record label.

1999

Mills' mother died of brain cancer in 1999.

Six months after she died, his father Paul came out as gay at the age of 75 and after 45 years of marriage.

Five years later, his father died of cancer.

2003

He has released some of his art/documentary photography works with the two books, Gas Book 11 (2003) and Humans (2006).

2005

He made his directorial debut with the independent film Thumbsucker (2005).

Thumbsucker (2005) was his feature-film directorial debut, for which he also created the film posters.

2007

In 2007, Mills filmed the feature-length documentary Does Your Soul Have A Cold?, which explored the issues around the introduction of anti-depressants to Japanese culture.

The film premiered at SXSW Festival and was part of IFC's documentary film series.

2009

In 2009, the Berlin-based culture magazine 032c devoted an issue to Mills.

For the occasion Mills was interviewed by Nick Currie, best known for his work as Momus, in a piece called "Getting Through the New Depression".

2010

His followup films include Beginners (2010), 20th Century Women (2016), and C'mon, C'mon (2021).

Mills received an Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay nomination for 20th Century Women.

Michael Chadbourne Mills was born in Berkeley, California, the son of Paul Chadbourne Mills, an art historian and museum director, and Janet L. Dowd, a draftsperson.

He graduated from Cooper Union in Lower Manhattan, New York City.

Mike Mills has created music videos for acts including Moby, Yoko Ono and Air.

Air named the fifth song on their album Talkie Walkie after Mills.

He has also worked as a graphic designer on promotional material and album covers for such acts as Beastie Boys, Beck, Sonic Youth, They Might Be Giants, and Ol' Dirty Bastard.

In addition he has created graphics for X-Girl, Marc Jacobs, and produces his own line of posters and fabrics called Humans by Mike Mills.

Mills played guitar and performed background vocals with the short-lived indie rock band Butter 08 along with Yuka Honda and Miho Hatori of Cibo Matto, Russell Simins of the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, and Rick Lee of Skeleton Key.

In 2010 he directed the Focus Features independent comedy Beginners which starred Ewan McGregor, Mélanie Laurent, and Christopher Plummer.

The film is both a romantic comedy and a film about a son reflecting on his memories of his father.

Amy Taubin of Film Comment praised Mills calling it a breakthrough, writing, "Mike Mills treats love and loss with a disarming tenderness and a refusal of sentimentality that make Beginners, his second feature, something of an anomaly among male identity flicks."

Plummer went on to win the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance.

2012

Mills is married to fellow artist and film director Miranda July, with whom he has a child, born in February 2012.

Documentary film

2016

His next feature film was the A24 coming-of-age drama 20th Century Women (2016) which starred Annette Bening, Greta Gerwig, Elle Fanning and Billy Crudup.

The film had its world premiere at the New York Film Festival, and was released on December 28, 2016.

The Hollywood Reporter film critic David Rooney praised the film saying, "Mills uses some of the same devices as Beginners to illuminate his characters' cultural formation, notably historic montages of their birth years or backgrounds prior to coming together. And he also glances ahead to their future lives, after the arc of the movie. But the quilting is more seamless here because the eccentricities are so integral to the writing and performances."

2019

In 2019, he directed the short film I Am Easy to Find starring Alicia Vikander, which accompanied the album of the same name by The National.

Mills' latest directorial feature film was the 2021 black-and-white drama film entitled C'mon C'mon starring Joaquin Phoenix, Woody Norman, and Gaby Hoffmann.

The film was distributed by A24 and had its world premiere on 2 September 2021 at Telluride Film Festival.

Clarisse Loughrey of The Independent praised Phoenix's performance noting it as "a career best", and further applauded Mills as "a master of intimate, unforced emotion and the kind of simple wisdom that always sounds best when it’s coming from the minds of children".

Mills has cited as his cinematic influences, Alain Resnais, François Truffaut, Yasujirō Ozu, Ermanno Olmi, Woody Allen, and Jim Jarmusch.