Born and raised in Hertfordshire, England, director Simon West began his career in 1981 when he joined the BBC as an apprentice film editor. During his four-year tenure there, he worked on a number of award-winning productions, including the documentary "Strangeways Prison" and the dramatic series "Bleak House" (both of which won BAFTA Awards). A 1985 grant from the British Arts Council enabled West to make his first short "Dolly Mixtures", which in turn led to a contract with Limelight London to direct music videos and commercials. Soon after winning the Best Video prize at the 1987 Montreux Music Festival for Mel and Kim's "Respectable", West transferred to Limelight's American offices and swiftly won a reputation for his TV commercials. Besides well-known spots for Little Caesar's (i.e., "Italian Feast"), West (who had switched to Satellite Films) helmed the "Ant" spot for Budweiser, as well as commercials for Sprint, MCI, AT&T and Ford Motor Company, several of which picked up industry awards. His work in this genre reached an apex when spots he shot for Pepsi and Budweiser both aired as part of the 1995 Super Bowl telecast.West moved to Propaganda Films and began considering offers for his feature directorial debut. Having made his name in funny commercials, he found himself deluged with "slapstick comedies, romantic comedies and dinosaur comedies" but held out until Jerry Bruckheimer sent the script for "Con Air" (1997), a heady mix of testosterone and pyrotechnics in a slick 115-minute package. Though panned by critics, the non-stop spectacle of noise, fire and madness took in over $100 million, making it one of the year's top action films. A powerhouse roster of stars including Nicolas Cage, John Malkovich and John Cusack signed on to wear either a white or (more often) black hat, helping to lift this tale of dangerous convicts hijacking a plane mid-flight high above "Turbulence", its mayhem-in-the-sky counterpart. After reading endless scripts, West settled on "The General's Daughter" (1999), adapted from the best-selling Nelson De Mille novel, for his sophomore effort, hoping that its classic but dark story involving betrayal, honor and conspiracy would prove he was not merely a filmmaker specializing in guns and explosions.
Profession(s):
director, editor, producer, assistant cameraman, screenwriter
Sometimes Credited As:
2006 Directed the remake of the 1979 thriller, "When a Stranger Calls"
2003 Directed episodes of "Keen Eddie" (Fox, Bravo)
2001 Helmed third film, "Tomb Raider", based on the popular video game and starring Angelina Jolie as Lara Croft
2001 With Jerry Bruckheimer, served as producer on "Black Hawk Down", based on a 1993 battle involving US forces in Somalia during an ill-fated humanitarian mission
1999 Directed second feature "The General's Daughter", starring John Travolta
1997 Feature directorial debut, "Con Air"; reteamed with director of photography Tattersall
1997 Formed Wychwood Productions
1995 Directed Pepsi and Budweiser spots seen on the SuperBowl XXIX (ABC) telecast
1993 Joined Satellite Films; directed TV commercials for AT&T, MCI, Sprint and Ford Motor Company
1991 Moved to USA and worked out of Limelight's Los Angeles office
1990 Worked as an assistant cameraman on "The Russia House"
1985 Awarded grant from British Arts Council; directed and wrote short film "Dolly Mixtures"
1981 Began career as apprentice film editor at the BBC
Signed by Limelight London to direct music videos
Collaborated with director of photography David Tattersall on the star-studded "charity video" ("Life Aid Armenia") in Britain
Joined Pilot Pictures, made a series of successful award-winning TV spots for Little Caesar's pizza company, among others
Joined Propaganda Films