Timo Tjahjanto

Director

Birthday September 4, 1980

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace Wilhelmshaven, West Germany

Age 44 years old

Nationality Indonesia

#62745 Most Popular

1980

Timo Tjahjanto (born Timothy Tjahjanto; 4 September 1980) is an Indonesian film director, producer, and screenwriter known for his film works mostly on the horror and action genres.

Tjahjanto owns the film production company Merah Production.

Apart from directing, producing, and writing story for his own films, Tjahjanto is also known as one half of The Mo Brothers with friend and fellow filmmaker Kimo Stamboel.

Later in the year, he released The Night Comes for Us based on a screenplay he wrote as an homage to Hong Kong 1980s cinema.

The film is the first Netflix original production from Indonesia and received acclaim from critics with a 91% score on Rotten Tomatoes.

The film stars top action stars Joe Taslim (Fast & Furious 6, Star Trek Beyond) and Iko Uwais whom he worked with previously in Headshot.

In supporting roles, he cast actors that have become frequent collaborators, such as Julie Estelle, Zack Lee, Sunny Pang, Abimana Aryasatya, Hannah Al Rashid, Shareefa Daanish, and Epy Kusnandar.

Citra Award winning actress Dian Sastrowardoyo also co-starred as an assassin tasked with hunting down the main character played by Taslim, marking her first venture in the action genre.

1990

He has cited Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho and Tommy Lee Wallace's 1990 adaptation of Stephen King's It as his major influences.

2007

The film is based on their 2007 short film Dara, which was included in the 2008 anthology film Takut: Faces of Fear.

It stars Julie Estelle, Shareefa Daanish, Ario Bayu, Aming, and Sigi Wimala.

Macabre received rave reviews and won several awards from international and local film festivals, with Daanish receiving praise for her performance as the titular character.

Tjahjanto and Stamboel appeared among the patrons of Herosase in Joko Anwar's The Forbidden Door.

2009

Tjahjanto and Stamboel rose to fame for directing and writing their feature directorial debut Macabre (known as Rumah Dara in local market) in 2009.

2011

Tjahjanto co-directed and co-wrote the segment with Gareth Evans, director of the 2011 action hit The Raid.

2012

In 2012, he directed a segment in the anthology film The ABCs of Death alongside other filmmakers which included Nacho Vigalondo, Banjong Pisanthanakun, Ben Wheatley, Noboru Iguchi, Ti West, and Yoshihiro Nishimura.

2013

The following year, he worked on 'Safe Haven', a segment included in the horror anthology film V/H/S/2 which premiered at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival.

2014

In 2014, Tjahjanto reunited with Stamboel as The Mo Brothers to direct, produce, and write Killers, a Japanese-Indonesian horror-thriller.

The film stars actors from both Japan and Indonesia, including Kazuki Kitamura, Oka Antara, Rin Takanashi, Luna Maya, Ray Sahetapy, Epy Kusnandar, and Tara Basro.

It premiered at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival and received positive reviews upon release with a 73% fresh score on Rotten Tomatoes.

2016

The duo received a Citra Award nomination for Best Director in 2016 for Headshot while Tjahjanto himself won the Maya Award for Best Director in 2019 for May the Devil Take You.

Timo received education at the School of Visual Arts in Australia, where he met future collaborator Kimo Stamboel.

He began his career in the film industry as a freelance story board artist and photographer.

The duo teamed up again in 2016 to release the action film Headshot with The Raid star Iko Uwais and Maya Award winning actress Chelsea Islan in leading roles with Sunny Pang, Julie Estelle, Zack Lee, Bront Palarae, and Ario Bayu in supporting roles.

2018

Taking a break from his works with Stamboel as The Mo Brothers, Tjahjanto explored the supernatural horror genre with May the Devil Take You in 2018.

This marks his first feature film as a solo director.

Released to positive reviews, the film saw him reunite with Chelsea Islan, Ray Sahetapy, and Shareefa Daanish.

In September 2018, Tjahjanto hinted on Twitter that he is working on adapting the action-thriller comic book JITU: Joint Tactical Intelligence Unit into a feature film.

Tjahjanto was announced as director of a live-action adaptation of the Bumilangit Cinematic Universe film adaptation of comic book character Si Buta dari Gua Hantu in The Blind of the Phantom Cave: Angel's Eyes in 2018.

2019

The project has not been officially confirmed despite Tjahjanto posting another teaser on Instagram in April 2019.

Tjahjanto has also confirmed that he has co-written a screenplay for a spin-off film focusing on Julie Estelle's character from The Night Comes for Us, titled Night of the Operator, with friend and collaborator Aaron Stewart-Ahn.

2020

In February 2020, Tjahjanto released the sequel to May the Devil Take You, titled May the Devil Take You Too with Islan reprising her role as the main character.

The film was released in theatres and later on Disney+ Hotstar in Indonesia with Shudder taking on the American distribution rights.

It received mixed reviews from critics.

The film earned Tjahjanto Best Director and Best Adapted Screenplay nominations at the 2020 Maya Awards.

While no official confirmation has been made, Tjahjanto and Stewart-Ahn teased a poster with Estelle's character in a red background on social media in January 2020.

In February 2020, Tjahjanto posted on his Twitter account hinting at a sequel to the Mo Brothers' 2009 hit Macabre.

In a podcast with fellow Indonesian filmmaker Joko Anwar in April 2020, Tjahjanto shared that while the movie was a hit on the festival circuit, it was not as successful financially and that he and Stamboel will only do a sequel if they have a story that fits their ideals.

Following the release of May the Devil Take You Too, Tjahjanto announced in October 2020 that a follow-up, titled May the Devil Take You: Dajjal, is in pre-production with Islan and Daanish hinting that they will be reprising their respective roles in response to the announcement.

Production was set to begin in early 2020, but was delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.