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An experienced Dutch director of photography who began his career in 1961 before collaborating with Paul Verhoeven on the director's first film, "Wat Zien Ik/Business Is Business" (1971), De Bont subsequently worked with Verhoeven on films including "Turkish Delight" (1973) and "Keetje Tippel" (1975). De Bont also worked with other Dutch filmmakers, notably George Sluizer ("Joao" 1972), and developed a reputation as a talented, indeed often flamboyant, craftsman....

Filmography

Food - ( Director / / Announced / )
Food - ( Producer / / Announced / )
Hunting Bronze - ( Producer / / Announced / )
Old City - ( Producer / / Announced / )
Stopping Power - ( Director / / Announced / )
The Duelist - ( Producer / / Announced / )
The Paper Chase - ( Producer / / Announced / )
The Paperboy - ( Executive Producer / / Announced / )
The Un-Dead - ( Producer / / Announced / )
Theodore, and the Impenetrable Suit of Armor - ( Producer / / Announced / )
Untitled (Jan De Bont/ St. Nikolas Project) - ( Director / / Announced / )
Untitled (Jan De Bont/ St. Nikolas Project) - ( Producer / / Announced / )
L.A.X. - ( Producer / 2002 / Lensing/Awaiting Release / )
Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life - ( Director / 2003 / Released / )
Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life - ( Titles(- Title Design) / 2003 / Released / )
Equilibrium - ( Producer / 2002 / Released / )
Minority Report - ( Producer / 2002 / Released / )
Slc Punk! - ( Executive Producer / 1999 / Released / )
The Haunting - ( Director / 1999 / Released / )
The Haunting - ( Executive Producer / 1999 / Released / )
Speed 2: Cruise Control - ( Director / 1997 / Released / )
Speed 2: Cruise Control - ( Producer / 1997 / Released / )
Speed 2: Cruise Control - ( From Story / 1997 / Released / )
Twister - ( Director / 1996 / Released / )
Speed - ( Director / 1994 / Released / )
Basic Instinct - ( Director of Photography / 1992 / Released / Village Roadshow Pictures Worldwide )
Lethal Weapon 3 - ( Director of Photography / 1992 / Released / )
Shining Through - ( Director of Photography / 1992 / Released / )
Flatliners - ( Director of Photography / 1990 / Released / Hoyts Distribution )
The Hunt for Red October - ( Director of Photography / 1990 / Released / UIP The Film Consortium )
Bert Rigby, You're a Fool - ( Director of Photography / 1989 / Released / )
Black Rain - ( Director of Photography / 1989 / Released / Festival Films Ltd )
Die Hard - ( Director of Photography / 1988 / Released / )
Leonard Part 6 - ( Director of Photography / 1987 / Released / )
Who's That Girl - ( Director of Photography / 1987 / Released / )
Ruthless People - ( Director of Photography / 1986 / Released / )
The Clan of the Cave Bear - ( Director of Photography / 1986 / Released / Village Roadshow Pictures Worldwide )
Flesh + Blood - ( Director of Photography / 1985 / Released / )
Jewel of the Nile - ( Director of Photography / 1985 / Released / )
American Dreamer - ( Director of Photography / 1984 / Released / )
Growing Pains - ( Director of Photography / 1984 / Released / New World Pictures )
The Fourth Man - ( Director of Photography / 1984 / Released / Verenigde Nederlandsche Filmcompagnie )
All the Right Moves - ( Director of Photography / 1983 / Released / )
Cujo - ( Director of Photography / 1983 / Released / )
I'm Dancing As Fast As I Can - ( Director of Photography / 1982 / Released / )
Private Lessons - ( Director of Photography / 1981 / Released / )
Roar - ( Camera Operator / 1981 / Released / )
Roar - ( Executive Editor(- editor supervisor) / 1981 / Released / )
Max Havelaar - ( Cinematographer(- cinematography) / 1976 / Released / Netherlands Fox Film Corporation )
Keetje Tippel - ( Cinematographer(- cinematography) / 1975 / Released / Tuschinski Film Distribution )
Dakota - ( Cinematographer(- cinematography) / 1974 / Released / Actueel Film )
The Family - ( Cinematographer(- cinematography) / 1974 / Released / )
Turkish Delight - ( Director of Photography / 1973 / Released / Nederland Film )
Joao - ( Cinematographer(- cinematography) / 1972 / Released / Sluizer Films )
Wat Zien Ik - ( Cinematographer(- cinematography) / 1971 / Released / Nederland Film )
TV Credits
Thoughtcrimes ( 2004 / Released ): Executive Producer
The Hollywood Fashion Machine ( 1999 / Released ): Actor
Split Personality ( 1992 / Released ): Director of Photography
Parker Kane ( 1990 / Released ): Director of Photography
Heart of a Champion: The Ray Mancini Story ( 1985 / Released ): Director of Photography
Sadat ( 1983 / Released ): Director of Photography
Help Wanted ( 1982 / Released ): Director of Photography
Eater ( Announced ): Director / Executive Producer
Full Biography (Back to top)

An experienced Dutch director of photography who began his career in 1961 before collaborating with Paul Verhoeven on the director's first film, "Wat Zien Ik/Business Is Business" (1971), De Bont subsequently worked with Verhoeven on films including "Turkish Delight" (1973) and "Keetje Tippel" (1975). De Bont also worked with other Dutch filmmakers, notably George Sluizer ("Joao" 1972), and developed a reputation as a talented, indeed often flamboyant, craftsman.

De Bont first worked in the US on the teen comedy-drama "Private Lessons" (1981), already suggesting the voyeuristic nature of many of his later films, as a randy teenager stalks his father's housekeeper with a camera. The drug addiction drama, "I'm Dancing as Fast as I Can" (1981), did not quite seem like suitable material, but after reuniting with Verhoeven for the lurid but striking erotic thriller "The Fourth Man" (1982), De Bont became one of Hollywood's leading cinematographers, specializing in rough-and-tumble action drama and often outlandish sex-themed material. The formulaic sports picture "All the Right Moves" (1983) had suitably gritty cinematography, but De Bont did better with the rollicking adventure "Jewel of the Nile" (1985) and the garishly colored farce "Ruthless People" (1986).

De Bont's deliberately intrusive visual style calls attention to his slick frame compositions and glossy mise en scene, while also indulging a formidable prowess at camera movement. "Die Hard" (1988), a punchy action pic, embodied all these qualities and offered a strong argument that contemporary Hollywood's one true forte is an intoxicating flair for creating all the thrills that technological know-how can provide. "Black Rain" (1989), a collaboration with another visually authoritative artist, Ridley Scott, had little to offer but its look. "The Hunt for Red October" (1990) was a very popular reteaming with "Die Hard" director John McTiernan while "Lethal Weapon 3" (1992) was at least a watchable, workmanlike example of its genre. "Basic Instinct" (1992) again reunited De Bont with Verhoeven for for another flashy psychodrama, with camera angles designed as the last word in empty-headed kinkiness.

Having provided such showy craftsmanship on so many hit films, it was no surprise when the veteran De Bont was finally given a chance to direct a film. Situating himself solidly in the realm in which he has been most assured--the visceral--he came up with "Speed" (1994), widely categorized as "Die Hard on a Bus". Critical acclaim was unanimous: of course no one expected rich characterizations, complex thematics or a heart on a sleeve. What people hoped for were some exciting variations on film narrative's oldest formula, the chase, and that is what De Bont delivered--in spades. Modestly budgeted for a large-scale Hollywood action pic--$30 million--"Speed" proved the first sleeper hit of that summer and greatly improved the fortunes of stars Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock. Offers also poured in for the suddenly hot director. De Bont was attached to a ultra-big-budget remake of "Godzilla" before he got swept up into "Twister" (1996), a special-effects oriented thriller from Amblin Entertainment about scientists who chase and study tornadoes. As with "Speed", De Bont avoided casting the usual "bankable" big names, opting instead for Bill Paxton, Helen Hunt and Cary Elwes. With "Speed 2: Cruise Control" (1997), the director stumbled a bit. Instead of a simple thrilling story as in the original, the sequel upped the ante. Set on a hijacked luxury liner, the film was merely a series of overstaged set pieces that overshadowed its stars Sandra Bullock and Jason Patric. Based on the film's disappointing box-office performance, it was unlikely a third entry in the series would be on De Bont's slate. Instead, he tackled a lackluster remake of the 1963 cult horror classic "The Legend of Hill House" titled "The Haunting" (1999) that despite an all-star ensemble that included Liam Neeson, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Owen Wilson and Lili Taylor played to only ghostly audiences. De Bont also developed a reputation as something of an autocrat on his sets. He eased away from directing briefly, instead lending his producing skills to the sci-fi films "Minority Report" (2002), directed by Steven Spielberg, and writer-director Kurt Wimmer's "Equalibrium" (2002). De Bont returned to the director's chair in 2003 to helm "Lara Croft, Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life," a superior sequel starring Angelina Jolie as the pneumatic video game heroine.


Profession(s):
director, director of photography
Sometimes Credited As:
Jan DeBont
Horizontal Line
Family
wife:Trish Reeves (has two children with De Bont)
Awards (Back to top)
MTV Movie Award Best Action Sequence "Twister" 1997
MTV Movie Award Best Action Sequence "Speed" 1995
Rembrandt Award 1992
Kodak Camera Award 0

Milestones (Back to top)
1994 Feature directorial debut, "Speed"
1994 Signed a two-year first look deal with Fox
1992 Nominated for a CableACE Award for best direction of photography in a comedy or dramatic series for "Split Personality", an episode of HBO's "Tales from the Crypt" directed by producer Joel Silver
1985 Served as cinematographer on his first US TV-movie, "Heart of a Champion: The Ray Mancini Story"
1983 Shot first US TV miniseries, "Sadat"
1982 Earliest American TV work included credit as cinematographer on a presentation of the "CBS Afternoon Playhouse", "Help Wanted"
1981 First American film as cinematographer, "Private Lessons"
1977 Moved to Los Angeles
1971 Began successful collaboration with Paul Verhoeven as the director of photography on Verhoeven's feature debut, "Wat Zien Ik/Memoirs of a Streetwalker"
1967 Began working as a director of photography in his native country, the Netherlands; first film, "Paranoia", directed by Adrian Ditvoorst


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